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Manley Variable Mu Mastering Version | Stereo Tube Compressor/Limiter with M/S & T-Bar Mod

Manley Variable Mu Mastering Version | Stereo Tube Compressor/Limiter with M/S & T-Bar Mod


 
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Our Price: $7,899.00



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Product Code: MANLEY-MMSSLCHPMSTBAR
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Description
 
  • M/S modification allows various approaches to Mid/Side recording, playback and processing
  • T-Bar Mod replaces the single 5670 tube with two 6BA6 tubes providing the original sound of the Variable MU
  • Stepped Greyhill rotary switches with 1% precision metal-film resistors
  • Variable Gain vacuum tube (per channel): 2 x 6BA6 single pentodes wired in in triode mode
  • Manley input and output transformers with pure nickel laminations in mu-metal case
  • Flat frequency response from 20Hz–25kHz
  • Balanced Inputs and Outputs
  • Fully differential all-tube circuitry using one 5751/12AX7, 12BH7, and 12AL5 per channel
  • Independently regulated B+ and Heater supplies
  • Includes HP Sidechain modification as standard

  • The Mastering Version of the Variable Mu Limiter Compressor incorporates detented and logable steps built with 1% metal film resistors on sealed gold-contact Grayhill switches. The lead time on mastering versions is typically longer than standard versions. Please contact us for more details. Unfortunately, non-mastering units cannot be modded into mastering versions.

    The Manley Variable Mu Limiter Compressor has been Manley's best selling product for many years. It is one of the very few compressors that has become a real standard in Mastering studios and contributed to most hit records over the last decade and probably the next. "Mu" is tube-speak for gain, and Variable Mu is our registered trademark for this limiter compressor. It works by using the "remote cut-off" or re-biasing of a vacuum tube to achieve compression. The precious vintage Fairchild 670 also uses this technique and is one of few all-tube compressor to do so, that we know of. Even the side-chain has glowing rectifier bottles. How's it work? The unique 5670 dual triode is at the center of the peak-reducing and compression action constantly being re-biased by the vacuum tube rectified side-chain control voltages which cause this tube to smoothly change its gain. Just like that.

    The compress mode is soft-knee 1.5 to 1 ratio while the sharper knee limit mode starts at 4 to 1 and moves to a more dramatic ratio of 20 to 1 when limiting over 12dB. Interestingly, the knee actually softens as more limiting is used. Distortion can be creatively used by turning up the Input and turning down the Output while using very little or no compression.

    You might notice that the Variable Mu Limiter Compressor has a ganged input control, but do not jump to conclusions that it is mono-unfriendly. Track away! There are separate threshold and output controls to make compensations with plus you can always adjust your individual source levels elsewhere, right? The advantage of the stereo input control becomes dramatically clear when you switch to LINK mode, and that's what our Variable Mu Limiter Compressor does better than anything else: final mix, 2-track, or mastering limiting and compression. Like one reviewer put it: "It's like pouring a bowl of sweet cream over the mix."

    High Pass Side Chain
    This modification comes stock on all Manley Variable Mu Limiter Compressors since 12/2009, on both regular and mastering versions.

    This mod adds two switches to the front panel, one for each channel, so that when engaged, the side chain will not respond to frequencies lower than 100Hz. (We standardly use 100Hz as the -3dB point. Other frequencies can be custom ordered.) This HP SC Mod can be used with music with heavy bass lines or bass-heavy mixes where you don't want the bass driving the whole action of the compressor.

    The filter is a very gentle 6db per octave 1 pole filter, and will typically be down 1-3db at 100 Hz, and down 4-6db at 50Hz. As you decrease the frequency the amount of limiting will decrease also. At the extreme LF (<20Hz) there should be very little gain reduction going on. The whole intent of the filter is to keep very LF stuff (like a heavy kick drum) from activating the compression/limiting so that the overall level doesn't duck with every drumbeat.

    The T-BAR Modification
    Backstory: The newer Variable Mu units use 5670 tubes instead of the 6386. By now the availability of the original USA GE 6386 is poor; Manley doesn't have any left at all, and what they do have are not usable due to noise, microphonics, bad side-to-side match, etc.

    So does the 5670 sound different? Well, up to about 6db of limiting it's about the same. After that point, the 5670 version tends to sound more "squashed" than the original 6386 version. Some like it better, some don't - depends on what you're trying to do.

    To solve all these problems, Manley came up with a really good solution: the T-Bar Mod. This uses a pair of 6BA6 pentodes wired as single triodes to replace each dual triode 5670 (or 6386). The 6BA6 T-Bar Mod is the preferred system to use in the Manley Variable Mu® for reasons of ability to perfectly match each phase-halve section and each stereo set, ability to select for lo-noise and lo-microphonic sets for a low cost, and because the action of the 6BA6's so closely resemble the smooth 6386 limiting curves.

    MID/SIDE (a.k.a. Vertical/Lateral, or Sum/Difference)
    This modification opens the door to stereo encoding and decoding as well as exciting image enhancement processing capabilities. For instance, setting to compress only the in-phase information allows the augmentation of the stereo image as the out-of-phase content is left untouched. Or, conversely, if you need a "more-mono" mix for broadcast, or vinyl-cutting for instance, you can set it to kill off more of the out-of-phase info which leaves more in-phase material in the final result.


    For more information on this or any other Manley product, visit www.manley.com.