bigtoe said:
how many people have been taught limiting is 10:1 and up? raise your hands. it's common knowledge! but you know... so is not plugging a ribbon mic into phantom power...and that's a myth i once believed in before i bought a daking pre... so i asked about the 10:1 thing.
Yeah, you're absolutely right. Theres a whole plethora of "common knowledge" that people have been "taught" that's mythological or just plain wrong (hi-fi speakers are hyped, studio monitors are flat, more louder = more better, analog is better than digital, digital is better than analog, big names mean quality engineering, mastering is where productions are made to sound professional, LDCs rule the microphone universe, etc. etc. etc.)
The whole 10:1 thing - while having a basic kernal of truth in it as far as it goes - is one of those oversimplifications that are rampant in the subject of compression, and leads to myths and other erroneous sundry.
For some reason which I never entirely understood, there is a tendancy for folks to try to simplify compression in general down to compression ratio and ignore the other parameters as minute details only.
Personally I would not consider 10:1 as a "brick wall", especially if there's a soft knee and a slow attack. Even 15:1, if you have a soft knee and slow attack, is still going to be a pretty "soft" wall, relatively speaking. And we haven't even talked about the relation of the threshold setting to the signal RMS. Once again, considering ratio alone when talking about compression is missing 85% of the equation.
bigtoe said:
i can use a limiter however i want...it's still a limiter by box and by definition as a lot of us were taught and how we talk about limiting.
Ahhh, now that starts venturing into labels versus fuzzy logic and all that stuff. Is an object defined by what it's named or by how it's used?
Is a elephant's foot that's used as an umbrella stand an elephant's foot or an umbrella stand? Or is it both? Or neither?
I was trying to avoid all that bugaboo by talking about limiting and compression instead of limiters and compressors; i.e. ignore the labels and look at the actual purpose/function.
My Pro VLA is labeled a "leveling amplifier" and not a compressor. Yet nobody that has ever crossed my path has ever mistaken it for - or called it anything but - a compressor. Labels mean nothing (see "studio monitor" for another example of bad labeling and newbie myth).
Sure you can use many limiters like a standard compressor if you set the knobs so and apply the device to thie signal so. At that point you are applying compression, not limiting, even though the label on the front still says "limiter". And I give you credit for undertanding and using that flexibility in the device.
But that just makes the labels even more arbitray. Let's look at the VLA one more time as an example. It'll exceed 10:1 compression on the high end, and even has a fast attack setting at 2ms. But I don't think anybody experienced with the gear would call the VLA a "brick wall limiter".
On the other end of the spectrum, consider the famous Manley Variable Mu "Limiter/Compressor". It has a "Compress/Limit" switch on the front with the following specifications: "Compress": 1.5:1; "Limit": variable 4:1 to 20:1.
One device's "compressor" settings are another device's "limiter" settings. At least according to the labels.
I say (and yes, this is only an IMHO thang, one can disagree, but it's an HO behind which I believe there is a strong point) screw the labels, screw even the numbers (to a degree, anyway). Look at the current application of the processing to determine the semantics of limiting vs. less-than-limiting.
G.