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).<br
/>
- Aux sends are not JACK ports, with <a href="/signal-routing/external-sends/">
+ Aux sends are not JACK ports, with <a href="@@external-sends">
External Sends</a> Jack ports are created so it is also possible to
send the tapped signal somewhere else directly, which is not usually
possible on hardware mixers.
<p>
It may be useful to
- <a href="/signal-routing/comparing-aux-sends-and-subgroups/">compare and contrast</a>
- the use of aux sends with <a href="/signal-routing/subgrouping/">subgrouping</a>.
+ <a href="@@comparing-aux-sends-and-subgroups">compare and contrast</a>
+ the use of aux sends with <a href="@@subgrouping">subgrouping</a>.
</p>
<h2>Adding a new aux bus</h2>
<dfn>Post-fader</dfn> aux sends are typically used when using an aux for shared signal
processing (FX), so that the amount of effect is always proportional to
the main mix fader. <dfn>Pre-fader</dfn> sends ensure that the level sent to the bus
- is controlled <em>only</em> by the send, not the main fader — this is typical
+ is controlled <em>only</em> by the send, not the main fader—this is typical
when constructing headphone and monitor wedge mixes.
</p>
panner, or to follow it. The latter could be useful for Reverb effects, or
for in-ear monitor mixes delivered in stereo.
</p>
-