
APPENDIX 4
and control the input levels of these. Below these, third from the top, you will
nd a knob labeled ‘Mix’ that lets you monitor whatever is plugged into the
Mbox’s inputs, or the playback of any audio tracks in Pro Tools, or a blend or
mix of these, as described later. Finally, at the bottom of the front panel there
is a 1/8” ‘mini’ headphone jack with an associated volume knob and mono
button.
The Back Panel
At the top-left of the back panel there is a standard 1/4” headphone jack.
To the right of this there is a USB port with a 48-volt phantom power switch
above it. Underneath the USB port there is a pair of RCA/phono connectors
for S/PDIF input and output. The line outputs are underneath again, in the
form of a pair of 1/4” TRS jacks that can provide either balanced or unbalanced
analogue output. A pair of analogue inserts is also provided via 1/4” TRS jacks
to allow you to hook up outboard processors while recording to disk. The nal
two connectors are dual-purpose XLR/1/4” jack combinations that will accept
either a typical balanced microphone cable XLR connector or a typical musical
instrument cable 1/4” jack connector.
Figure A4.20
The original mbox (no
longer manufactured).
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