Yea I got the ratio set at about 2.5. It sounds pretty good to me but I'm no veteran so I don't have a great point of reference. My main concerns are the attack and release settings. I know my ears aren't really trained so the differences are super subtle. Generally what should the settings be when using compression on the way in?
Is the situation one where it's going to cause a problem if you get it a little wrong (or it doesn't turn out as well as it could)? Then go real light, or skip it.
If not, this is the time to dial in something you can hear or want to try.

My attitude (mostly in case one' mode where I don't want to be the one that screws it) is to
try to err on the conservative side where ever my ear and best guess takes me- particularly in regard to stepping on transient and life you can't get back.
I've been using a P38 lately (vocals, bass, guitar sometimes ) which just has numbers at each end of the dial. But I would go along with Boulder' and add you're looking in the 70-20ms attack range, 200-50 release, 2:1 if it's 'just a little easy off the top.
Then watch the threshold, and attack, and adjust (and learn

) ..in real time if you feel it.
Consider the dbx160xt for example; much faster than above (faster than I like for this kind of vocal tracking), but an auto release -that is also fast, but also tough to beat.
But really, you need to get a handle on what happens (even at low ratio) when attack gets down into where it's seeing the range of the rise times of the track, (i.e., large differences,
deeper grab, and consequently farther to release for a given threshold), and the pulled back ('smoother if you like) sound of slower release vs. the more forward presence' sound of fast release.
At this point you have to be extremely general 'cause there's no plan.. neither of us know what the gig is.
