Lampdog wrote:otobot wrote:The sum of both channels will be played from one side. .....This is how it works in every mixer (analog or digital/software).
Nope, who told you that, lmao.
In a stereo sample, if you pan to the left you only get left. If you pan to the right you only get right. That is a universal for stereo anything.
Yeah, if you read again, and also the content you left out, that's what I said. I said "
The sum of both channels will be played from one side. As you gradually pan one side to the the opposite side it will be more and more added to that signal." Of course it's clear that I meant, the sum of both channels is played from one side if you pan everything to that side.
In any normal mixer, be it analog or digital in a DAW, if you pan a side (let's say the left side) all the way to the other (right) side, it gets
summed to that side and will be
heard from that (right) side.
In a 'normal' mixer's stereo channel if there's only a signal in one of the stereo channels, it will pan over to the other side and
not disappear.
What we found out in this thread is, that when you have a stereo sample in the MPC that contains only a signal on one side, if you pan that signal all the way to the other side passing the center mark, it will be
subtracted from its original side and will gradually disappear and be totally
inaudible when panned 100% to that side.
I was wrong at first to assume the MPC's mixer works like a 'normal' mixer.