
Ford Van
Banned
I have never heard of him. Looks like he does rap?
He does some rap, but mostly does rock from what I've heard...Ford Van said:I have never heard of him. Looks like he does rap?
Boy, I gotta tell you, there are some passages in that article that are of dubious quality:sunnydyz said:here's the url of that [article].
http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/jun00/articles/metring.htm
Someone correct me if I'm wrong abut this, but I believe that many, if not most, bar graph VU meters with a peak hold function are only "holding" the highest reading of the slower VU reading and not the faster-transient peaks of a PPM.In an attempt to combine the best aspects of both VU and quasi-peak meters, some bar-graph level displays are available with a VU response shown as a solid bar, accompanied by a floating dot above it which registers the PPM level.
True only for studio audio gear designed to operate at a +4dBu nominal line level. Not true for gear operating at -10dBu line level, many tape recorder VU meters, or most radio broadcast transmitter/receiver gear. Perhaps he could say that most studio audio gear is becoming standardized at +4dBu line levels, but such a statement cannot be as broadly applied to VU meters, not even all those (lke tape decks) that operate at +4 line levels.While the VU meter has now become fairly standardised — zero point at +4dBu
You all know that I am NO advocate of digital clipping in any way shape or form, but even I have to say that the above statement is a bit of a hyperbolic overstatement. Even the breifest of transient overloads is clearly audible? Please. Not for 99.9% of the population. BUT, that doesn't mean one should consider them OKUnfortunately, the nature of digital systems is such that even the briefest of transient overloads is clearly audible
OK, so the chart is only valid for European-calibrated gear. For us Yankees, the chart - as far as the FS calibration, anyway - is indeed incorrect. The statement that the "American SMPTE standard" is 0dBu = -20dBFS (or, 0VU on a +4dBu signal is equivalent to -16dBFS), sounds close enough for rock n' roll, and is probably what we sould be paying attention to here in the New World...again, even that is only if we assume that the converters we're using are indeed calibrated to that standard. That still should be checked in the converter specification.In Europe 0dBu has been standardised by the EBU to be -18dBFS, in order that a signal peaking in analogue equipment at the top of the EBU-standard PPM scale — and therefore with true peaks at around +16dBu — remains a little below the digital full scale value. Just to be awkward, though, the American SMPTE organisation set their standard for 0dBu at -20dBFS instead
SouthSIDE Glen said:Someone correct me if I'm wrong abut this, but I believe that many, if not most, bar graph VU meters with a peak hold function are only "holding" the highest reading of the slower VU reading and not the faster-transient peaks of a PPM.
G.
Geez, don't we already have enough monkeys doing that now?flatfinger said:This way any monkey w/ this system and a L2 can smash there audio like a banana!!!!!!!!!!!!![]()
SouthSIDE Glen said:Someone correct me if I'm wrong abut this, but I believe that many, if not most, bar graph VU meters with a peak hold function are only "holding" the highest reading of the slower VU reading and not the faster-transient peaks of a PPM.
True. And as one who has had Inspector from the EA days before Roger Nichols got his paws on it, it's one of my favorite status/metering plugs.ofajen said:Glen:
Better meters such as Dorrough actually show simulataneously both a true peak reading and an RMS reading, allowing for the user to quantify perceived loudness and crest factor. Even Roger Nichols' free Inspector plug in does this.
Cheers,
Otto