First, raise the AGC gate back to the default value. I can hear what you are describing in listening to the MP3. It sounds like you are driving the multiband AGC's or limiters way too deep. Try to speeding up the release times in the higher bands. What are the meters telling you? WB AGC?, AGC's, Limiters?. They hold the key to what is going on. The AGC’s are slower to respond, so I would look at the higher bands of the limiter section. I've never experienced an Omnia being dull on music. The opposite is normally true. Usually they are the brightest thing on the dial.
whitfm said:Just found somebody else with the problem (in a different Omnia processor) that I am having with our Omnia One. This is from Goran Tomas in the Processing Clips thread. Perhaps 'pumping' was not the correct term to use.
"These rare HF transients will cause higher band limiters in Omnia.6 to punch holes and create a prolonged dulling of the sound until the limiter releases back to usual GR. It doesn't help that the gating will cause higher bands limiters to recover very slowly because they are gated after the transient, and if there isn't any HF energy to trigger the gate (as there isn't in these songs) that will take a noticeably looong time.
To be fair, there will always be certain track that will "break" up any processor and it's most important what a processor does 99% of the time. However, and I just might be overly sensitive to this, this problem is something that I can hear often with Omnia.6 even with regular program material, not just these extreme examples. And that I couldn't (without ruining the rest of the sound) solve satisfactory by adjusting the processor. The milder effect of this problem is high-end breathing and changing frequency balance throughout the song (or with radio program that has lots of voices/cuts/jingles being mixed quickly and/or simultaneously)."
THAT is the problem I'm dealing with. Help! Thanks