When in stereo mode, each works as expected independently.
When I jumper CH A Out to CH B In,
1. there is no sound on Filter A unless Direct Gain B or Filter Gain B is up. Neither Direct Gain A nor Filter Gain A produce any sound independently.
2. there is no sound on Filter B unless Direct Gain A or Filter Gain A is up. Neither Direct Gain B nor Filter Gain B produce any sound independently.
It's been a while since I've used my Superfilter, but I'll take a stab at this one. I'm pretty sure I got it right, and you won't hurt anything.
The behavior you described is correct. Since everything is in series, there won't be a way to operate the two filter sections independently.
Based on what I think you're after, try setting things as follows in series mode:
Direct Gain A: This would be the dry (unfiltered) sent to input B. Set it to "0".
Filter Gain A: This will set the level of the (high-pass) filtered signal you send to input B. You don't want to risk over-driving the channel B input, so try setting this to "5" or so.
Keep channel A set this way, making minor adjustments for Output A -> input B level if needed.
Since everything is in series, Output B becomes your main output. Output B will be the mix of Direct Gain B and Filter Gain B. Try the following:
Direct gain B: This becomes your new "dry" signal level, which is just the high-pass filtered signal from "A" in your case. Set it to taste.
Filter Gain B: This is your total (i.e. series) filtered signal level, think of it as
HPF + (x)PFb, where "x" is the mode of filter B. Set it to taste.
So by changing the Direct and Filter B control settings, you can have no output, all HPF, all "
HPF + (x)PFb", or a mix. And for an added twist, if you set Direct A to "10" and Filter A to "0", you can disable your input HPF.
I hope this helps. If not, I'll delete this post in a hurry!
-nate.