StevieStingray
Well-known member
As posted in a previous thread of mine, I ordered a SansAmp Bass Driver DI programmable recently
In anticipation, I downloaded the owner's manual and had a read through.
A couple of sections that really stumped me were:
"...you can run SansAmp PBDR into the front input of an amp. Be sure to keep the Level of SansAmp close to unity gain, so as not to overload the amp’s input, which could result in undesirable distortion. "
"To minimize noise going into SansAmp PBDR, we recommend active electronic instruments have the volume set at unity gain/maximum and tone controls positioned flat."
As an EBMM owner, I took note, but what the heck is "unity gain"?!
I Googled it, and after reading a few lines of a few articles, my head starting hurting.
Since I am neither an electrical engineer nor a physicist, can someone explain in lay terms what "unity gain" is?
Are they talking about the bass' controls? Or the amp's controls?
Either way, how do you determine when unity gain is achieved?
In anticipation, I downloaded the owner's manual and had a read through.
A couple of sections that really stumped me were:
"...you can run SansAmp PBDR into the front input of an amp. Be sure to keep the Level of SansAmp close to unity gain, so as not to overload the amp’s input, which could result in undesirable distortion. "
"To minimize noise going into SansAmp PBDR, we recommend active electronic instruments have the volume set at unity gain/maximum and tone controls positioned flat."
As an EBMM owner, I took note, but what the heck is "unity gain"?!
I Googled it, and after reading a few lines of a few articles, my head starting hurting.
Since I am neither an electrical engineer nor a physicist, can someone explain in lay terms what "unity gain" is?
Are they talking about the bass' controls? Or the amp's controls?
Either way, how do you determine when unity gain is achieved?