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SPL
Surround Monitor Controller One-point stereo and 5.1 volume control, source and speaker management Review
in RECORDING (US), October 2003 SPL Surround Monitor ControllerMake your monitors sit up and perform Rear connectionsFront controlsDoes it work?How does it sound?So... Sound Performance Lab claims that its Surround Monitor Controller (SMC 2380) provides surround and stereo routing and volume control, with excellent audio quality. The stated aim: To provide surround signal routing and switching without sound degradation, without VCAs or A/D-D/A conversions, at an affordable price. Lets see how it does at these jobs. Rear
connections The last set of eight connectors are balanced 1/4 inch and are used for the audio monitor outputs. There's a pair for connection of stereo monitors and then an additional six for a separate surround setup. The accompanying labels Stereo Speaker Outs and Surround Speaker Outputs should not be misunderstoodwe're not dealing with power amp/speaker connections here; all signals through the SMC are intended to be line-level audio, and the monitors attached to these outputs need to be active ones with their own built-in amplifiers. One neat little feature on the rear panel is that all connections are labeled rightside up and upside down, so that if you lean over the top of the box from the front to change connections, the labels are easily readable. Front
controls Also on the front panel is a series of buttons. The first group, labeled Source, provides switching between the four sets of inputs. The second group, Monitor Mode, provides many useful monitoring options, including mono summing of the left and right channels, mono summing of the left and right surround channels, a -20 dB pad for all the output channels, and a global mute for all outputs. The final button group is labeled Speakers On, and it provides independent on/off control for all six surround channels and the stereo output channels. This is especially handy for calibration of a surround system from a calibration tape or tone/noise generator. Does
it work? Playing back material such as CDs, DVDs, and SACDs allowed us to run the SMC through its paces. All the switches and buttons work as advertised, switch quietly and positively, and are easy to reach and distinguish. The unit overall is very robust and solid. The SMC is strictly a signal routing box with global volume control, it does not provide any kind of bass management or tone controls. (For more on bass management and other surround issues, check David Kelln's article on page 32 of this issue.) Among the stated design aims: To provide anyone, whether working from a DAW or not, with consistent monitoring levels and flexible monitoring control. It certainly achieves that. DAW users can avoid clumsy aux bussing schemes in software just for monitoring, when a quick button push on the SPL unit can provide quicker and cleaner A/B/C/etc. comparisons. How
does it sound? So...
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