<p>
- <dfn>Auxilliary sends</dfn> are simple <a
+ <dfn>Auxiliary sends</dfn> are simple <a
href="@@processor-box">processors</a> in a bus or
track channel strip. They tap the signal at a specific point in the signal
flow (pre-fader, post-fader, before or after EQs and other plugins, etc.)
Aux sends from several tracks are collectively sent to a
<dfn>bus</dfn> in Ardour, to create a monitor mix for a
musician, or to feed an effect unit. A bus used in this way is considered
- an auxilliary bus or <dfn>Aux bus</dfn> even though it is the same as
+ an auxiliary bus or <dfn>Aux bus</dfn> even though it is the same as
any other bus. The output of such a bus might
be routed to separate hardware outputs (in the case of headphone or monitor
wedge mixes), or returned to the main mix (in the case of an effect).
</p>
<p>
- Aux sends are not JACK ports, <a href="@@external-sends">
- External Sends</a> should be used to send audio to Jack ports. External Sends can
+ Aux sends do not show up outside of Ardour either on the audio device
+ or as JACK ports, <a href="@@external-sends">External Sends</a> should
+ be used to send audio to the audio device or Jack ports. External Sends can
send the tapped signal somewhere else directly, which is not usually
possible on hardware mixers.
</p>
<h3>Using the Send Fader</h3>
<p>
Every send processor has a small horizontal fader that can be adjusted in the
-usual way. It is not very big and so this can be a little unsatisfactory if you want
+usual way. It is not very big and so this can be a little unsatisfactory if
a very fine control over the send level is required.
</p>
<h3>Map Aux Sends To Main Faders</h3>