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iqi616 said:It would help if they actually put VU meters on the gear. Everything has PPMs. The last product I bought with VUs was my Tascam 244. Unfortunately I didn't realize they were revelent at the time.
I started doing some of my recording work in a DAW within the last year or so. Prior to that, it was all wide-track analog tracking and mixing, with VU meters on every channel. I'll get back to that point below.
First, I think there are some key points here that folks who haven't worked with tape tend not to intuitively understand when they start recording in the digital realm. Never one to be afraid to beat a dead horse, let me say a couple of things that John's and Glen's smart and subtle posts didn't beat people over the head with quite hard enough:
1) Instantantaneous peaks have basically nothing to do with perceived loudness. (Read this one out loud at least 10 times, until you actually get the point.)
2) The only reason we care about peaks in digital recording is because digital is fully capable of giving them back, but you must not allow the peaks to exceed 0 dBFS if you want a clean, accurate sound with headroom and full dynamics. We don't care about peaks because they tell us anything about loudness, because they don't.
3) Analog gear uses the concept of a reference level, and, at least in America, that is based upon measurements of some kind of average or RMS level. That kind of measurement does relate to perceived loudness.
4) The same concept should be used with digital gear. A reference level should be used and some sort of averaged measurement of loudness should be referenced a "safe" distance below 0 dBFS. -24 dBFS is definitely safe.
I happen to use -20 dBFS as a reference level (I might be better off at -24). I also happen to use a pair of Modutec VU meters (the kind used in the 3M M-79 series, which is why I had two spares) hanging off my recorder outputs, when no 2-track analog deck is patched in (with its own VU meters to do the job). The stand alone meters are driven by a balanced distribution amp and calibrated so that a -20 dBFS tone from the soundcard gives me my reference deflection on the VU meters.
Those VU meters are a very quick and easy guide to setting levels when tracking and when mixing on the DAW. The key deficiency of the aging VU standard is that the VU frequency response is flat, which means they overreport the apparent loudness of low-end components, since our hearing, even in the flattest part, the 80+ dB SPL range where I calibrate my monitor gain, has about a 10 dB sensitivity fall off below 200 Hz or so. That can be corrected with an EQ in front of the VU, though of course, it will no longer be a standard VU. The beauty of using the calibrated monitor system is that you develop an intuitive sense of the proper loudness of things, and if your bass is reasonably under control in your monitors, you can rely on your ears to assess the bass in the mix.
Don't worry, I don't delude myself that this post will really get the point across any better than the previous posts, but it has been therapeutic for me.
Cheers,
Otto