I read along here, and it was a great reminder that I should actually calibrate my outgoing and incoming levels properly, to get the best possible gain-staging setup and best resulting signal quality out of my setup... I never really did that for the D8B and the outboard gear I tie in with it and just made the settings on-the-fly, when I needed to send something out, etc.
Thanks to this conversation, this made me look into how to properly calibrate such levels, and was looking where the D8B's test-tone generator/oscillator is (I didn't know before). It's part of "Acuma Labs - Pro Audio Lab" on the D8B.
If you're using the crack and have all the plug-ins, you have that one as well.
So, this allows you to play a test tone at a frequency you can choose (e.g. 1 kHz sine), and route that tone anywhere, where the output of other plug-ins can be routed. In my case, I wanted to set the levels for my outboard gear, so I sent the signal out a pair of (physical) Aux Sends, through (bypassed) outboard gear, and then back to the D8B... and made sure that the signal comes back at about the same level it went out.
This didn't work with all the gear, of course... for example, I have a few devices that use unbalanced connections, so they can't handle a +4 dB level. But at least the test-tone from Pro Audio Lab allowed me to get an idea what signal level I can send to a particular device and where the various gain settings need to be, to get a healthy signal out into external gear, and a healthy signal back into the D8B, at the level it expects/needs for that input.
Long story short: Thanks for asking about this... I hadn't really discovered the Oscillator in the Acuma Labs Pro Audio Lab plug-in, and this gave me some revelations about some struggles I had with some external gear I'm using (e.g. a GSSL Bus Compressor with a really finicky Threshold setting, that was apparently just because I always sent the wrong level to it).
Just thought I'd share... maybe finding the Oscillator in that plug-in will help others here as well