Hi vitaliistep,
there's a good example in the manual,
13.5 Tutorial 5: difference between spectrum profile and equalizer which gets to the heart of this question.
In essence the engine has it's own reactive life, sitting there mathematically waiting until we interrupt with our keyboards and other input like the pre EQ - then it sings.
The engine among other things works with fundamentals and overtones (related but worth more reading).
The Spectrum profile affects each fundamental (up or down) as it relates to other spectra in real time.
The EQ pre-shapes the fundamentals' balances, dialed up on the interface before it hits the engine - so like a band or as many tiny bands as you want can be given powerful influence without radical volume consequences (like you get with regular EQ in post).
But that's dry wording - there's probably way more going on - how to describe? Here's how I think as I edit presets..
So, maybe a plain way to think of it is the EQ (button on the main interface) sends parameters which shapes the data fed into the engine. In hard experiential terms, you can hear a radical EQ change without blowing our speakers or ears.
This is unlike say an EQ where you can lower all bands and it's volume = 0 - or raise all bands and volume = deaf forever (also note a flat line anywhere = same dB no change - good anchor point to grasp it I think - it only acts on our chosen dips and peaks - so you can really influence just one note, if you want). Balance happens because, this EQ, in effect (if not technically accurate to say) only tells the model initial fundamental related EQ numbers, nothing about volume other than balancing (not sure of course of the kind of maths/science going on there in the background but might be linearly aligned to some dB related algorithm). So if you kind of get this, it's extremely 'plastic' in the good sense of the term.
In the middle, the engine does its thing calculating auto-magically on the fly, then outputting our results impacted by our initial EQ shaping.
On the end of the chain, you could then apply EQ3 (3band parametric with Qfactor) and blow as many speakers as we want
Interestingly, when you add "Spectrum Profile" editing into the middle of this - you can nudge and diminish 'bands' in respect of how the overtones all interact! or really boss them about - adding, subtracting and balancing overtones - it truly seems infinite and part of the real magic, that you can experiment quite dramatically and still find a way to the sounds your looking for.
Playing around with these, without fear of breaking something is recommended. Push the things too far and then peddle back until you really hear what's happening.
Anything I'm badly misunderstanding? Corrections always very welcome.
Last edited by Qexl (26-09-2018 03:56)
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors