When AM stereo came out, I remember big discussions in audio processing circles on the need of a processor that handled the signal in sum and difference mode instead of standard stereo left and right mode because of loudness issues on mono radios.
Several questions:
Did this mean that if you had something in only one channel, it would come across as loud as something in both channels?
What are the disadvantages to processing sum / difference?
Is such an audio processor available for computer audio?
I ask because I run an internet station, & today I am at a location where, for very boring reasons, I am listening in mono.
A recording just played that had voices exclusively in the left and exclusively in the right channels at different times.
The volume certainly sounded to be about halved!
I'm currently using a software-based audio processor called "Sound Solution," a slow AGC followed by 5 bands of compression, 5 bands of expansion, 5 bands of limiting, a dual band final loudness processor, and a peak clipper:
http://www.winamp.com/plugins/details/120741
To my knowledge, it does not chain the stereo channels together; I was listening through headphones yesterday to an acoustic piece with lots of dynamic range that had the lead singer swirling around the stage (as the two channels independently bounced up and down in volume)!
I realize 99.99% of my audience will NEVER listen to an internet radio station in mono, but for that .01%, I'd like to know if there's a way to correct the volume issues with discrete channel content without doing damage to the stereo signal... especially if it's a software solution.
I figured if anybody would know the answers to my questions, it would be this group!!! 8)
Thanks for your help.
Several questions:
Did this mean that if you had something in only one channel, it would come across as loud as something in both channels?
What are the disadvantages to processing sum / difference?
Is such an audio processor available for computer audio?
I ask because I run an internet station, & today I am at a location where, for very boring reasons, I am listening in mono.
A recording just played that had voices exclusively in the left and exclusively in the right channels at different times.
The volume certainly sounded to be about halved!
I'm currently using a software-based audio processor called "Sound Solution," a slow AGC followed by 5 bands of compression, 5 bands of expansion, 5 bands of limiting, a dual band final loudness processor, and a peak clipper:
http://www.winamp.com/plugins/details/120741
To my knowledge, it does not chain the stereo channels together; I was listening through headphones yesterday to an acoustic piece with lots of dynamic range that had the lead singer swirling around the stage (as the two channels independently bounced up and down in volume)!
I realize 99.99% of my audience will NEVER listen to an internet radio station in mono, but for that .01%, I'd like to know if there's a way to correct the volume issues with discrete channel content without doing damage to the stereo signal... especially if it's a software solution.
I figured if anybody would know the answers to my questions, it would be this group!!! 8)
Thanks for your help.