wgliradio said:I usually run the Band 4 limiter into virtually no gain reduction in the limiter. Only on extereme HF energy will it tickle off some gain. This keeps the limiter from squashing the highs. Now, what about HF control?
Well, Scotts HF clippers are so good that they will deal with the highs with very little help from the limiter I have found, leaving the sound to be very open. The key is playing with the extras in the clipper to find a good tradeoff.
The other end of this is adjusting the highs in the 4 band AGC to keep things consistent.. and relying on the limiter ONLY for extreme peaks.
The other trick with the highs is to make sure that the HOLD is on 0 or 1 (whichever is the quickest function) and that the gate is pretty open. You have to work on that based on how you are driving the limiters.
My other problem has been transients on older stuff. The DSP-X deals with hypercompressed material like nobody's business. It's silky voices and singers that get it in trouble in the midrage where it's over detecting and over correcting, causing for odd sudden EQ changes that, depending on the level of audio around the transient, can last anywhere from a second to 5 seconds or more before the box recovers.
As for the bass, I like the soft clipping...I think it produces a big sound... better than the Orban processors which have that Ogonowski gutter /ripple bass that never sounds as full or warm as the 8100 bass. I don't know how much more control they want to give given what the box is and where it is on the grand scheme of things compared to the other boxes in the line. It is a 5 year old box now, which is an eternity in digital processors. Still, it is still one of the best boxes for the buck with the Omnia ONE, which is leaps and bounds ahead of the 3 Turbo.
The F Mister said:I would like to see more bass clipping options in de dspx-fm. I find the gap between hard/soft to big for my taste. I tried to solve this before the clipping section with the lower two limiters but still there is a big change in overall signature sound between these two settings. I ran it from the beginning with soft clipping and thought this was what I was looking for but now I'm running it with the hard clipping and think that although I don't like it's lower freq's it does handles the mid/hi's better this way. So maybe a option for mid clipping would be the right one for me (ajustable knee would be awsome).
The F Mister said:Thanks for the info Goran, nice to see that BW value their existing users with a special offer (if this works out with the sales guy).
So far allmost all my points are taken in to consideration and as I said about the presets "it's not a big deal". Although I'm somewhat surprised to hear that this isn't a quick fix. When you take a look a the competitors. Current boxes can hold essentially unlimited presets and even the older omnia/orbans can have more than 8 user presets. But it's the sound at the end that counts. So please put all time into that.![]()
Goran Tomas said:We will also look into adding the stereo enhancer for DSPX, but at a later date. Regards,
Goran Tomas
wgliradio said:Goran Tomas said:We will also look into adding the stereo enhancer for DSPX, but at a later date. Regards,
Goran Tomas
*Prays* Please limit its ability. Too many people don't know how to use this. I would rather see the X without it, it sounds just fine stock.
The F Mister said:Than don't turn it on if it came with the option would be my thoughts.
wgliradio said:That's good. Stereo Enhancement is very overrated. It adds to multipath, makes blending in car stereos more obvious and enhances the distortion in poorly designed receivers. I really can't think of any positive.
David Reaves said:wgliradio said:That's good. Stereo Enhancement is very overrated. It adds to multipath, makes blending in car stereos more obvious and enhances the distortion in poorly designed receivers. I really can't think of any positive.
Bingo. One of the reasons we call the Ariane's L-R manipulation "control" rather than "enhancement."
"Enhancement" implies only adding to the signal, while "control" means you can not only add but also **reduce** dynamically according to the needs of individual program elements.
When you add anything to the L-R you are risking trouble, as the stereo subcarrier is much more fragile than the main channel. It was my opinion at the time, and I still hold to it, that designing a processor that ensures **consistency** in the L-R would be more useful than one that simply added more signal.
A couple of other things:
1) It's my experience that by reducing the low end of the L-R you can reduce some of the effects of multipath, as multipath usually manitsfests itself as IMD which is particulary noticeable when mids and bass intermodulate. For this reason, the Ariane (and the Ariane module in the DSPXtra) have the option to gently roll off low bass in the L-R signal path. Once you do this, you can be a bit more aggressive with the amount of L-R processing you use, if you choose. Or you can just sound better.
2) Manipulating the stereo effect by carefully adjusting the L-R gain dynamically does not generate any 'new' signals, and the end result has a very 'organic' feel to it. This is in contrast to methods that create a delayed copy of the L-R and re-sum that delayed signal back with the original L-R.
The Ariane design has proven, to my ears anyway, that it is possible to maintain the perceived stereo effect while actually **reducing** the average L-R level by basing the L-R control on RMS levels in a multiband environment. This can be a godsend in a multipath-prone listening environment.
But no matter what, garbage in may equal even MORE garbage out after processing. To the best of my knowledge, that's true for ANY processor. I've seen it demonstrated more than once that if you manipulate the L-R of a lousy MP3, more often than not you will be in for a very rude awakening.
Kind Regards,
David
PS: Sorry if this sounded like an Ariane ad... I'm more than a bit biased![]()
wgliradio said:There is a big difference between the L-R control in the Ariane and the brute stereo enhancement in other devices.