M
Mike Freze
New member
Hi! In my home recording books, I always read that you should not let your input levels for any instruments exceed 0bB because of clipping/distortion problems. Getting it close to 0dB for the best, full signal at the beginning gain stage...I understand.
Yet I also understand that the audible range for hearing sound is between 0bB (the "noise floor") and 120dB (pain threshhold level, although some people hear more than a 120bB range). Again, understand. I also realize that CD burning limits a range to no more than 90dB (and you use compression to sqeeze the range to boost the overall volume even more). OK. Above a 90dB range for Cds, distortion: too low, can't hear the lows sufficiently.
Why, then, do we not record near a 90dB limit to avoid distortion rather than a 0dB limit? I thought 0dB is where human hearing of sound begins to kick in. At least that's what my books say about the audible range for human hearing concerning sound.
Mike Freze
Yet I also understand that the audible range for hearing sound is between 0bB (the "noise floor") and 120dB (pain threshhold level, although some people hear more than a 120bB range). Again, understand. I also realize that CD burning limits a range to no more than 90dB (and you use compression to sqeeze the range to boost the overall volume even more). OK. Above a 90dB range for Cds, distortion: too low, can't hear the lows sufficiently.
Why, then, do we not record near a 90dB limit to avoid distortion rather than a 0dB limit? I thought 0dB is where human hearing of sound begins to kick in. At least that's what my books say about the audible range for human hearing concerning sound.
Mike Freze