In answer to the question posed in the post above.
From the page 1070 of the manual.
Using control groups
SONAR lets you link faders, knobs, or buttons in the Track view, Track Inspector and Console view into
groups.
Groups are collections of controls whose movements are linked together. For example:
Two
Volume faders or controls can be grouped so that when you increase or decrease the volume of one track,
the volume of the other track changes in exactly the same way.
Four
Mute buttons can be grouped so that when you click on the
Mute button to mute track 1, tracks 1 and 2
are muted and tracks 3 and 4 are un-muted.
The Console view and Track view identify controls, knobs and faders that are grouped using a colored group
indicator that is displayed on the controls in each group. The controls in group A are displayed with a red indicator,
the controls in group B with a green indicator, and so on. Controls, faders and knobs can be grouped together.
When you group buttons together, the way they work is based on their position when you create the group:
Buttons that are in the same position when grouped will turn on and off together at all times.
Buttons that are in opposite positions when grouped will always remain in opposite positions.
When you group buttons with knobs or faders, the button turns on/off when the knob or fader reaches its halfway
point.
You have several additional options. There are three general types of groups: absolute, relative, and custom.
Here’s how they work.
Absolute
The range of motion in all controls in the group is identical. When you move one control in the group, all other
controls in the group move the same amount in the same direction. The controls do not necessarily need to start at
the same level.
Relative
The range of motion for controls in the group is not the same. All controls in the group have the same value at one
point—the lowest level for send, return, and volume levels, and zero for pan controls.
Custom
Sometimes you want to define a more complex relationship between the controls in a group. For example:
You want two controls to operate in reverse—when one fader drops, the other increases (cross fade).
You want two volume faders grouped so that they are locked together at maximum level, but drop at different
rates.
You want two faders to be locked together with the same range of motion, but a third fader grouped with them
to have a different rang