AardvarkPSW said:
Ask yourself what the resolution of your signal is if you peak at -12.
I said RMS -12 dbfs, peaks no greater than -6 dbfs.
AardvarkPSW said:
Before you open up your mouth and make another a stupid remark consider the math and consider my previuos post.
Heh... oh teach me master.
AardvarkPSW said:
It also helps if you recognise the difference between a mic overload, a pre-amp overload and an overload at the converter stage.
Wow, spoken like someone who just graduated out of a 2 year recording school! You speak of the obvious as if it were some great revelation. Let me give you a clue--someone that knows what they are doing doesn't overload anything unless it is on purpose for a special effect (and they never overload their AD's).
AardvarkPSW said:
You can record your drums with some transient peaks as overs at the converter stage and not go to recording hell. Yes, you basement recordists should avoid overages in general but that does not mean you cannot use a good understanding of the physics involved to improve your recordings.
Um... AUDIO EXAMPLES of this "technique" please.
Let's see... what you are saying is this:
1.) Because resolution data is so important we have to record really hot, even to the point of clipping on transients.
2.) However, clipping equals--NO MORE DATA, you've peaked... everything over that is lost forever. It's 100% data loss over 0db.
3.)
So in the interest of preserving data you should lose data? Doesn't make much sense buddy boy because you are PERMANENTLY losing information on transient peaks just so you can better hear stuff like the microphone bleed, line noise, etc...???
So who needs to STFU and learn something now?
AardvarkPSW said:
So before you go all silly sit down and calculate how much resolution is to be had on a drum track that peaks at -12.
Seeing as there are 6 db's of range per bit this is hardly the "calculation" you make it out to be. It's a "mere" 22 bits.
AardvarkPSW said:
Oh brother!
Spoken with the self-righteousness of the insecure.
I'd love to read your exciting theories on how you deal with all these HOT AND CLIPPING channels of audio on the mixdown buss, what your "ideal" mixdown is like for mastering, and how often you find yourself being either in the red and LOSING data or yanking your master faders down--once again losing the oh-so-precious resolution you clipped your signals (losing information) for.
The world would be SUCH a better place if it weren't for half-informed, half-a-clue types like you going around spreading their misinformation, disinformation and outright idiocy. But hey, most people with some common sense can tell who's a moron and who isn't regardless of whatever newspeak attempt at technical jargon they manage.
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