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Good sound is not an accident.

Find public presets, save your own presets, and keep mix decisions in a form you can revisit later with context.

Save your own presets
Compare real channel-strip decisions
Keep notes with the settings

Product preview

Channel strip

EQ GEQ

Input

Dynamics

FX

Delay
Reverb

Input

Make signal fundamentals visible and reusable.

Gain, trim, phase, and delay define the base every later own preset depends on. AudioCheats makes that block readable, saveable, and quick to revisit on the next setup.

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Trim

Input attenuation

Pad

Phantom power

48 V

Delay

Polarity

Gate

Keep gate logic, do not guess it later.

Gate decisions are easy to make in the moment and hard to explain later. AudioCheats shows threshold, activity, and timing as readable behavior so setups can be documented and revisited in the right context.

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EQ

Make tonal shaping readable, not just documented.

The EQ section does not only show values. It exposes the shaping logic behind them, so you can see which tonal idea a preset carries and which curves are worth saving, comparing, or extending.

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GEQ

Revisit and compare GEQ moves.

GEQ choices are often context-heavy and hard to reconstruct later. AudioCheats makes the resulting shape visible so you can understand, compare, and continue those moves on purpose.

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+12 +8 +4 0 -4 -8 -12

Compressor

Make dynamics traceable, not just adjustable.

The compressor section turns threshold, ratio, and gain reduction into readable behavior. That shows whether a setting only catches peaks, deliberately densifies, or is worth saving as a reusable character.

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Notes

Keep practical knowledge attached to the preset.

Not every useful mix decision is a parameter. Notes capture which context mattered, which own preset fits which situation, and what you want to remember next time.

Notes turn a preset from a starting point into a saved learning and working context.

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Workflow

This is how a preset enters real work.

A clear starting point, a readable module state, your own adjustment, and a saved way back. That is often enough.

01

Open a fitting preset

Pick a public example that matches the source or situation closely enough.

02

Read the module state

Check how the decision is built across input, EQ, dynamics, FX, and notes.

03

Pull it to your setup

Adjust the state to your room, stage, or artist.

04

Continue it as your own preset

Save your own preset and reopen it for the next similar case.

Next step

If a fitting starting point is found once, it should not disappear afterwards.

Open the library, inspect relevant examples, and keep your own preset ready for the next similar setup when you need it.