
mark4man
MoonMix Studios
People,
Me?...I'm always looking for a way to trick the digital gods...& grab more gain during pre-mastering (so as to achieve that illusive "industry standard.")
So...In looking at various CD burners to purchase (my replication service actually prefers pro quality CD-R to Exabyte tape), specifically looking at units like the Tascam CD-RW2000 & the Alesis Masterlink, I noticed they have a gain control (see...I told you this was a stupid question.)
So, what's the deal...I am assuming if one can input straight audio into these units...that they contain their own onboard ADC's; & convert/burn in real time?
And my hopeful question is:
Is there any gain advantage, at all, in utilizing these units in this manner? (audio in, as opposed to digital in...I understand they accept digital signal, via S/P DIF, AES/EBU, etc.)
What I'm thinking is...my studio's power amp is a top-notch unit, with great analog circuitry; & plenty of power & headroom to spare with a great S/N ratio. My Audio Interface (out of the PC & into the poweramp) is also a great piece of gear; & I use studio quality cabling. If I pumped straight multitrack audio into a CD-RW2000 or a Masterlink (you see where I'm goin' with this, right?); & kept my peak levels sensible, wouldn't I wind up with a better RMS in the finished product? I know 0dBFS = 0dBFS, but there's gotta' be a secret to achieving an industry standard CD gain...a greater "average" or "perceived level"...beyond the use of big studio outboard compressors & such.
Anyone have any experience in this area?
Thanks,
mark4man
Me?...I'm always looking for a way to trick the digital gods...& grab more gain during pre-mastering (so as to achieve that illusive "industry standard.")
So...In looking at various CD burners to purchase (my replication service actually prefers pro quality CD-R to Exabyte tape), specifically looking at units like the Tascam CD-RW2000 & the Alesis Masterlink, I noticed they have a gain control (see...I told you this was a stupid question.)
So, what's the deal...I am assuming if one can input straight audio into these units...that they contain their own onboard ADC's; & convert/burn in real time?
And my hopeful question is:
Is there any gain advantage, at all, in utilizing these units in this manner? (audio in, as opposed to digital in...I understand they accept digital signal, via S/P DIF, AES/EBU, etc.)
What I'm thinking is...my studio's power amp is a top-notch unit, with great analog circuitry; & plenty of power & headroom to spare with a great S/N ratio. My Audio Interface (out of the PC & into the poweramp) is also a great piece of gear; & I use studio quality cabling. If I pumped straight multitrack audio into a CD-RW2000 or a Masterlink (you see where I'm goin' with this, right?); & kept my peak levels sensible, wouldn't I wind up with a better RMS in the finished product? I know 0dBFS = 0dBFS, but there's gotta' be a secret to achieving an industry standard CD gain...a greater "average" or "perceived level"...beyond the use of big studio outboard compressors & such.
Anyone have any experience in this area?
Thanks,
mark4man