A
an1989dy
New member
why do db meters start at a negative number then go to zero then go to positive and are not equal increments on the lines?
EleKtriKaz said:0 on the db meter of whatever piece of equipment you might be looking at is the point at which the sound will cause THAT piece of equipment to clip. Different preamps or compressors or convertors have different db thresholds, and so their meters are calibrated specifically for that piece of equipment and do not refer to an actual decibel level of 0. Obviously whatever music you're recording is being played at levels much higher than 0 db. Someone correct me if any of this is wrong.
Son of Mixerman said:How come were not talking about VU meters and the Db scale in electrical terms?
The reason the numbers are negative is because Zero Db is supposed to be 0.775 Vrms so any current below that will be less than .775Vrms right.
Db is often thought of as being a loudness measurement which is a subjective thing. VU meters are showing you an average where peak is showing you the maximum and the difference I believe it refered to as crest factor. Like Tom said the VU will read 18 to 20 DB below where the actual clipping is, but digital Zero is clipping. VU meters lag about 300ms compared to 10ms for a ppm, which means you should definitely know how to read both types when recording digital.
Here is an article that might help.
http://emusician.com/ar/emusic_meter_matters/
SoMm
It's all wrong... but both Tom and SofM already corrected you!EleKtriKaz said:0 on the db meter of whatever piece of equipment you might be looking at is the point at which the sound will cause THAT piece of equipment to clip. Different preamps or compressors or convertors have different db thresholds, and so their meters are calibrated specifically for that piece of equipment and do not refer to an actual decibel level of 0. Obviously whatever music you're recording is being played at levels much higher than 0 db. Someone correct me if any of this is wrong.
No prob......! However, it does illustrate just how useful it is to know what you're talking about before you post it................!EleKtriKaz said:Thanks...I didn't realize that I was wrong until you just pointed it out. Nope seeing their corrections didn't do it...I definitely needed you to point it out.
masteringhouse said:The actual voltage will depend on the load (ohms) but essentially yes. 0dBm is generally defined as 1 milliwatt across 600 ohms (.775V).
If you want to play around with this stuff, here's a cool little calculator:
http://www.analog.com/Analog_Root/static/techSupport/designTools/interactiveTools/dbconvert/dbconvert.html
Plug in 600 for ohms, 1 mW for power, and you can see the definition.
grinder said:Here's the simple explaination of dBs.![]()
http://prorec.com/prorec/articles.nsf/files/EA68A9018C905AFB8625675400514576
Blue Bear Sound said:No prob......! However, it does illustrate just how useful it is to know what you're talking about before you post it................!
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