Huh???

  • Thread starter Thread starter David Katauskas
  • Start date Start date
Thunder33 said:
I don't know, but when you got them, you could have everyone wearing gold plated diapers.

To go along with all those gold plated connections in my "I can keep dreaming but it aint gonna happen" Gold Plated Recording Studio :D
 
LeeRosario said:
To go along with all those gold plated connections in my "I can keep dreaming but it aint gonna happen" Gold Plated Recording Studio :D


I take all of my plugs and spray them with a gold plated paint I bought at Walmart. I don't hear any big difference in this gold plated hooplah
 
Thunder33 said:
I take all of my plugs and spray them with a gold plated paint I bought at Walmart. I don't hear any big difference in this gold plated hooplah


You have to buy the Apogee "Audio Champion" gold spray at guitar center. It's over priced and over marketed but at least it looks prettier than the Walmart brand.
 
I will have to use that in conjuction with my Behringer Ultradoesn'tsuck Pro!
 
I like their disclaimer best......

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Shame on ALL of you!!!!!!!

You guys are gonna' have some poor ass fella' going to the neighborhood arts and crafts store, buying up all the gold spray paint, and make a COMPLETE mess of everything!!!

And with some of the threads ive read, i wouldnt be surprised!

What makes it all the worse; Is you guys KNOW this, too! LMAO. :D
 
Watch it!

metalhead28 said:
Ha, this is just going to fuel the fire for everybody around here that thinks the pros have "secrets" that they don't want to share with anybody. :rolleyes:


Don't get me started....! LOL ;)
 
Thunder33 said:
I don't know, but when you got them, you could have everyone wearing gold plated diapers.



what does that mean?!!!



i got a feva, and the only perscription, is MORE COWBELL!!!
 
Ford Van said:
How do you know that you are "clipping" on your desk?

The multitrack isn't indicating overload on playback, i.e., the signal has recorded cleanly with no clipping; through to the desk's channel strip - bring up the trim (clip indicator lights), which when further pushed starts to introduces the audible overload I'm looking for sometimes. Farther upstream, the desk main buss VUs show all's fine. The 6000's 30~32dB headroom usually sees to that.
 
But the clip indicator light is set to come on at anywhere from 4 to 6 db BEFORE clipping.
 
12db before clipping actually. And so.....what's your point? The rhetorical questions aren't doing it for me.
 
The question is, how do you really know you are "clipping" on your console?
 
I'll repeat. It's not the source that's clipping, the desk's output buss is well within it's limits.

Where else upstream could it be? Bring up the trim on the channel strip (clip indicator comes on), further push the trim (still within limits at output buss), voila - clipping occurs.

Unless I've missed something?
 
Aha, you're talking 'terminology' here, perhaps?

I thought 'channel strip' was the subject of your sentence.

"How do you know you are actually "clipping' ?" would have made things clear.

Well, OK, let's just say "I 'modify' the incoming waveform to please this particular ear"

Clipping, distorting, splitting hairs....
 
well come on now...

well it's pretty easy to know if you're clipping...


just use the ears god gave you.
 
What I am getting at is how can you be certain that you have actually achieved clipping when the "clip" indicator is set at -12dB BEFORE clipping? The light coming on is certainly NOT an indicator. The light coming on just means that you have got at least within 12dB of actually clipping. But, you can't be certain that you actually ARE clipping unless you have an indicator that shows you HAVE achieved clipping.
 
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