
Farview
Well-known member
Also, a lot of 'studio in a box' things like the Roland VS-2480 have fixed point summing busses. It is really easy to overload the summing buss, and turning down the master fader doesn't help in that situation.
I don't see it as making a whole lot of sense to finalize the mix volume until you have an actual mix to finalize and a target finiaization "sound" to actually shoot for.
Let's please remember that peak levels don't relate to perceived loudness. The meat of the tone that we hear relates to the average level and that is how we should monitor for setting levels.
You should set your gain staging to work with the I/O structure of the gear and leave enough headroom in the digital world above that average reference level, but don't worry about peak levels first.
In the box, you can use a plug in with metering that shows both peak and average, but I prefer to stay out of that mode because it's not how I prefer to work.
I think Otto and I just went through something similar to this in another thread just the other day, and Otto was taking your position, more or less. You're both right in your fashion, but i think maybe the language - or maybe the intent - is getting muddied a bit.So you can see we aren't pegged to an average level, instead we must just be mindful of the noise floor
way could well deviate the average level off of +4dBu (let's not even bother talking about -10dBV, shall we?),
But in this case, aren't "should be" and "is" two different things? How many non-PC-soundcard converters have you come across that used balanced XLR ins and are speced solely for -10dBV?.No, we need to be talking about -10dBV, because it's much closer to what the true physical average level fed to a converter should be. It's also more efficient than +4dBu if the circuit is designed for only the -10dBV operating level.
Of course, I am advocating a -10dBV with professional connectors and balanced lines, don't get me wrong. But the higher level of +4dBu is an anachronism, just as the historical reasons for the "+4" and "u" parts of it are no longer relevant.
Also, a lot of 'studio in a box' things like the Roland VS-2480 have fixed point summing busses. It is really easy to overload the summing buss, and turning down the master fader doesn't help in that situation.
But in this case, aren't "should be" and "is" two different things? How many non-PC-soundcard converters have you come across that used balanced XLR ins and are speced solely for -10dBV?.
Do people still drink V8 these days?How many V8s stay stuck in traffic everyday?
No, I disagree. In digiland you don't have to concern yourself with average levels during tracking, so long as your gain staging maximizes dynamic range. That tends to occur at a low level....
Wow. I had a chat quite a long time ago with the US RME tech support guy I believe when I first got my ADI-8s about the three input range selections, which then was 'optimum and closest to 'straight in. It's been long enough that I've actually for gotten which one isDo people still drink V8 these days?![]()
.
Jon, educate me a bit on this technical level when it comes to what you were referring to about the input levels of the converter ICs, if you'd be so kind. There's a few things I don't understand or are not 100.0% sure of about that. A few questions:
- When you talk about the input voltage equated to 0VU on the chip, I don't understand. The only metering I've ever noticed on converters is on the dBFS side. I'm not sure how VU measurements even relate to the IC?
- And related to that, what relation is there between the input voltage on the input pin of the XLR connector of the converter's box and the input voltage on the input pin of the IC? Is it 1:1? Or are you saying that there is/are intermediate solid state between the two that steps down the line level coming into the box to the voltage "wanted" by the IC (which would probably answer the first question.)
...
-G.
Is this not the beauty of our 24bit wide palette.I think everything you say is accurate. However, I'm much more primitive than you. When I'm recording with my digital standalone in 24-bit mode, I'm not primarily interested in maximizing dynamic range on each track. I'm interested in a simple system of tracking that ensures I record with enough headroom to avoid overs and keeps levels reasonably consistent from track to track with regard to real music power and perceived loudness, while coming reasonably close to maximizing dynamic range.
...snip
Cheers,
Otto
Let's accept this as the ideal gain staging:
Acoustic noise > microphone noise > preamp noise > converter noise.
..snip
Is this not the beauty of our 24bit wide palette.
In Sonar I set the track rec meters ‘peak + rms’, range -24 – 0.
From eight feet away setting up the pres, running phones mix during the tracking, whatever- don’t even need the little numbers.
As soon as the ‘rms part pokes into view you’re there: -18 -20 or so record level, peaks go.. (‘to who gives a rat’s axx. landand ..
Rough initial alignment done.
This is fairly cool INHO.![]()
Failed? Wait I know this one.. ‘Umm, What is ‘No’?I agree completely with this as well as ojafen; it shouldn't be that critical. I was trying to demonstrate that but I guess I failed. Although again it's possible to have a source with >20dB crest factor (drums, live jazz, classical), so it's not quite as easy as -20dBFS RMS and ignore peak.
I have the same RME unit; technically it is slightly quieter at the highest input setting, something like 2dB. That isn't because of the converter though; it would probably be a limitation of its analog input stage. Probably the switch activates a pad that follows the analog input buffer, such that higher levels into the buffer keep the buffer's noise floor to a minimum. Although I think the RME uses 4580s as buffers, which should yield -120dBA noise floor or so; not sure why the noise would change.
Anyway, IC converters max out at 0dBFS between 0dBV and +6dBV. So any higher input into an ADC must be padded, and a DAC output amplified.
Then I confess I don't get the relevance of even talking about this when it comes to talking about gain structuring and recording levels and all that. The padding and amping on each side of the IC - it seems to me - simply make the actual intermediate IC voltages an all-but-invisible intermediate housekeeping step that, as long that the pads and amps are evenly calibrated (which they should be), does not play into gain structure. Maybe I'm missing a point. Wouldn't be the first time...Anyway, IC converters max out at 0dBFS between 0dBV and +6dBV. So any higher input into an ADC must be padded, and a DAC output amplified.
Then I confess I don't get the relevance of even talking about this when it comes to talking about gain structuring and recording levels and all that. The padding and amping on each side of the IC - it seems to me - simply make the actual intermediate IC voltages an all-but-invisible intermediate housekeeping step that, as long that the pads and amps are evenly calibrated (which they should be), does not play into gain structure. Maybe I'm missing a point. Wouldn't be the first time...![]()
G.
LOL, OK, I misunderstood the why of where you were coming from.+4dBu continues to exist as a standard in digital studios because . . . we need extra heat?
You are calling for a complete re-think of how the world works in a thread created by someone that doesn't know how it works now. In doing so, you seem to have gone over the heads of people who actually do know how the world works now.
What are we talking about again?