ULTRABRA
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Re Busses in Gain Staging
I've recently started using Satson - originally for its Console Emulation, but as it has VU meters for the channels, I've started to use those for Gain Staging. I'm using only VST synths, and as I understand it, I get the output of the synth to hit approx 0 on the VU meter (it occasionally goes over) and then use channel fader for the out put volume per channel. I'm routing each channel to one of 4 busses, before it reaches the Master. Here is where I am confused - the Satson Buss has VU meter, but no Gain knob. I don't have anything to use on the Satson to up the gain, and most of the time its quite a bit below the 0 on the VU. Question: Does it matter that the busses don't hover around 0, that they are lower? And if I SHOULD get them to around 0, how do I do that (eg, use bus gain level to up it before it hits the Satson, then reduce the volume by same amount on the fader)?
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bitflipper
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/20 10:32:30
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It's not necessary for the sub-busses to hit 0 on the VU. You can pick any target you like as a reference, as long as it's not too far left of the center position (because VU meters get harder to read the further left of 0 you go). In fact, it's probably better to NOT hit 0 on a submix. When those busses get added together on the master, the level will likely increase, requiring your limiter to bring it all back down.
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ULTRABRA
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/20 10:40:11
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Thanks Bit - yes, you are right, the sum of the busses puts things right back up again. Here is what the Satson manula says though ... as you can see, re the Busses, it says to set the volume to average around 0 (although it does not say how to do that, as there is no gain on the Satson buss). As A Gain Staging Tool: To get a good mix, start by leveling your tracks’ volume output: 1. Create a new mixing project 2. Insert Satson Channel on all tracks of your project as a first insert 3. Insert Satson Buss on all busses and the master track 4. Before leveling your tracks with the DAW fader and before inserting other plugins, use Satson Gain control to level individual tracks to 0VU (VU meter near zero) 5. When you have leveled all your tracks to 0VU, do not touch Satson’s Gain control again 6. Start mixing as you usually do: Insert new plugins; adjust the volume levels using your DAW’s fader tracks, etc. (Please remember point number 5) Buss Volume Levels : As with individual tracks, set the volume level of your busses to average around 0VU as well. While viewing Satson Buss’ VU Meter, adjust tracks that send to the buss with your DAW fader (not Satson’s Channel Gain control. Remember point number 5 above!). Master Track Volume Level: Use the same process as above for “master track” volume. Adjust the busses’ DAW faders to level at 0VU on your master track or 2buss.
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Paul P
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/20 15:41:10
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The meters are adjustable to -14db or -18db and this should be taken into consideration. I've learned from discussions here to pick the reference according to need, then use meters at each stage and adjust each stage so the needles just touch 0 on the peaks. Stick to your reference throughout and there won't be any problem when you reach the end. This seems to be more or less was is being done here. I'm not sure that using the Satson Channel and Buss emulators gives you enough meters to see each stage. And I don't see how the signal could be low when it hits your buss if it's near zero in the track that feeds into it. Especially if there's more than one track near zero feeding into your buss. It should be too high, if anything. Does the Satson Buss reduce level on its own ? Meters like those from Klanghelm are easy to insert anywhere you want to see what's going on.
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Jeff Evans
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/20 16:38:58
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The Satson is not the way to go in order to set up good gain staging. A proper VU meter is better and also one that has many ref levels as well. eg -14 or -20 etc..It may also be altering the sound which is not desirable. I get all the tracks hitting 0 dB VU. (rms) Also when Paul P says get the VU meters to touch 0 dB VU on the peaks what he is really saying is loudest part of the rms component is hitting 0 dB VU. Real short term peaks don't actually move the VU much at all. They slip through. Use your peak metering to monitor short term peaks. This can be confusing. I manage to get buses to also be at the ref level but I meter the buses before the buss fader. I tend to adjust the buss faders down a little and you can still end up with a perfect mix with all the buses feeding the main mix buss as well and that should also be at the ref level. When you do this well you wont bring on a clip light anywhere either! Turn the SPL monitoring level in your room up!
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Paul P
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/20 18:57:10
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Jeff Evans Also when Paul P says get the VU meters to touch 0 dB VU on the peaks what he is really saying is loudest part of the rms component is hitting 0 dB VU. Real short term peaks don't actually move the VU much at all.
You're right Jeff, I should have been clearer in my choice of words since peak has a precise meaning. They only 'look' like peaks on the meter,in reality I guess they're more like mountains. So the summits of the 'rms' component.
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ULTRABRA
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/21 11:46:03
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Thanks for the replies. Paul : Re your comment "I don't see how the signal could be low when it hits your buss if it's near zero in the track that feeds into it. Especially if there's more than one track near zero feeding into your buss. It should be too high, if anything. Does the Satson Buss reduce level on its own ?" ---- I get each track that feeds to a bus to hit 0VU as a max, but that is the first insert on the chain. The actual channel faders output of the various tracks that feed into a bus are lower than Zero dbfs, to when the tracks hit the VU meter on the bus they are not as hot.
Jeff:When you say Satson is not a good tool to use - do you mean just the Klanghelm is better as a VU meter? the analog console coloration the Satson puts on, can aos be turned off, so in that case it should be like using a VU meter without coloration. Re your comment "I manage to get buses to also be at the ref level but I meter the buses before the buss fader. I tend to adjust the buss faders down a little and you can still end up with a perfect mix with all the buses feeding the main mix buss as well" ----- does that mean you will use the Klanghelm trim to boost the bus signal if its not getting up to 0VU, and then bring its output fader down?
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Jeff Evans
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/21 15:14:04
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I have got the Satson and yes it is good console emulator. Although I have Mixbus now and for me that sounds quite different and better. But it does mean complete export of stems and into another DAW. For certain genres it is well worth it though as many here also agree. (All the VU's in Mixbus are calibrated to -14 which also happens to be my main ref level here for most work) The VU should be OK in the Satson and it will certainly allow you to see rms levels pretty well. It only has two references though so it is limited in the ref levels it can work at. (It is nice to just switch into -20. All I have to do is recalibrate my real VU's and drop everything incoming that is down 6 dB) Also the ballistics of the meter may not be quite as real in the Satson as say the Klanghelm ballistics are. I read a bit more into meter ballistics. I have found virtual VU's move in many different ways compared to the real (quality) VU's. They are hard to beat as they move in such a beautiful manner. The Klanghelm meter is surprisingly close! I don't use the meter to add or subtract gain. (That could be confusing. Some how gain magically appears in your staging) If all your track levels are at the rms reference level than it is always easy to get any buss to reach 0 dB VU as well. The balance of track faders feeding a buss determines this final buss level. If I find a buss is low in level eg say it is reaching consistently around -4 dB VU then I grab all the tracks feeding that buss as a group and increase their (track faders) level slightly and it usually does the trick. I use the Presonus Faderport and it is excellent for fine tuning stuff like this. If a buss level is reading -1 or -2, I tend to leave it. Being fractionally low won't hurt. This is level before the buss fader. I fine tune buss faders as a group that are feeding the stereo buss. They often end up close to unity or -1 to -2 dB as well. I find I can get all my tracks sitting at say -14 dB VU (rms level), all my buses which contain various mixes of track groups at the ref level and the final stereo mix at ref level. With care and fine balancing I find it is possible. And at the same time all the mixes on the buses and the final stereo buss are perfect. Ballistics comes into play. A buss may appear as being over loud but it could be some wild VU needle swinging instead. (eg one or more tracks has poor dynamic control hence making levels erratic) A compressor set right will tame that wild swinging (buss or at track level usually on one offender) and the needle starts to move much better. It pumps up nicely to 0 dB VU but does not go over. You only need mild compression and the ballistics settle right down and now the level has gone from wildly moving up to + 3 dB VU to a more fluid action easing up real nice and just hitting 0 db VU. Dynamic control on buses is great because it can tame a whole bunch of tracks at once. Removing un needed frequencies also helps to tame wild swinging needles. The VU meter has a response to DC actually so it can show very low un heard frequencies. And also very high frequencies that don't need to be there. Think about when the mix on say a buss is right, the VU is now going to show you that lovely mix in the form of a smooth but dancy ballistic. When a mix is wrong the needle does not move well at all. I can tell that something is up. You can almost mix using a VU. After a while you learn how much to push each track fader up. First one to about -4 db VU etc... As the other stuff comes into a mix at the right balance and level the VU just ends up hitting 0 dB VU and it is moving great. On a stereo buss if your vocals are tool loud the VU will move a bit wrong and the level will be too high. Once you settle vocal levels right down to the right spot then the VU is now showing you the music and the vocals together and it just starts looking about right.
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ULTRABRA
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/22 10:29:37
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Hi Jeff, thanks for the detailed reply. I also got hold of the Klanghelm VU meter (8 EUR can't go wrong). I'm still not totally clear how to handle the busses - you say if the bus is low in level then you group all the tracks that feed the bus and increase their level. This will now make them too loud in the mix, so is the aim then to drop the Group fader to compensate? It sounds much easier simply to increase the Klanghelm Volume Control knob by a few db (or whatever it takes). Is there something wrong in doing it that way- will the sound quality suffer? Also, all my tracks feeding into each group are all over the place, so it would be very fiddly to find them, group them, and raise the overall level.
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bitflipper
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/22 11:04:46
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It actually makes no difference in terms of fidelity whether you turn up the tracks going into the bus or increase volume at the bus itself. Either way, you're doing the same thing: multiplying the data by a constant multiplier. Do whichever method you are most comfortable with. You could, however, make a mathematical case that it's not preferable to reduce track volumes and then make them up at the bus. That may be where Jeff was coming from. Keep in mind that we're talking about levels going into the master bus, not the final post-limiter levels. If your levels going in are conservative, then you leave more options about how loud the final master will be. That can change depending on your final destination (broadcast, MP3, YouTube, DVD/CD) and you probably don't want separate mixes for each.
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Paul P
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/22 11:28:51
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ULTRABRA It sounds much easier simply to increase the Klanghelm Volume Control knob by a few db (or whatever it takes).
Conceptually, I also don't think it makes sense to use the meters to adjust level. If you do have to insert a gain stage, it would be clearer to use something like the free Blue Cat's Gain plugin from Blue Cat Audio. To streamline your gain staging it might be a good idea to go back to the very beginning and adjust your levels consistently moving forward, grouping those tracks that you want to maintain in relation (by linking or through a new buss) as you go.
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bitflipper
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/22 19:41:20
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Love Blue Cat's gain plugins! Especially for volume-matching vocal clips.
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ULTRABRA
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/26 01:40:02
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I've been playing around more with these VU meters. What strikes me most is how "approximate" it seems to be - the needle bouncing around so much, how is it possible to have any degree of accuracy? Is it not better to use something that gives an EXACT RMS reading for the track? For example, I inserted the Sonalksis FreeG, and it gives me an exact RMS value for what I'm playing back. The VU Meter needle varied wildly, and the results didn't match. Maybe I'm over-thinking this ??
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Jeff Evans
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/26 05:49:52
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When a VU meter is swinging wildly it can mean the ballistics of the meter are telling you have not tamed the dynamics perhaps. Once you start controlling dynamics nicely the VU does not swing anywhere near as wildly. It changes quite a lot even with mild compression. What VU meters are you using as a matter of interest. I must admit though that the real thing and real nice expensive ones at that still move in a nicer way and in a more fluid manner. I think when it comes to ballistics the actual real meter is probably very hard to beat. (I suspect it may be harder to emulate than what people think) I am spoiled in that regard because I use the hardware meters most of the time and I know it is not something many are able to do. The Klanghem meters are pretty good though and close. But they can still tell you what is going on. When the meter is moving nice and just hitting 0 dB VU then you know the rms level is at the reference level. So they can be accurate. The problem with other types of VU meter and even ones that show you accurate rms readings they fall down in the ballistics department and don't let on as much as the real ones do re dynamics being a little out of control. Read the VU response of a real nice mixed and mastered CD. See the difference. You will have a different opinion about them then. (preferably not a smashed master either, one that has some nice dynamics in it) Adjust them so they are just hitting 0 dB VU most of the time and observe. Steely Dan's 'Everything Must Go' looks great on a (good) VU. A great example.
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Paul P
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/26 10:04:39
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ULTRABRA What strikes me most is how "approximate" it seems to be - the needle bouncing around so much, how is it possible to have any degree of accuracy? Is it not better to use something that gives an EXACT RMS reading for the track?
If you're keeping things down in the -20db to -14db range, it really doesn't matter what the exact value is. I like Jeff's idea of getting into the dance of the needles as a way of getting information on the dynamics of the music. I'm sure there are other ways this could be done. I find VU meters easy and relaxing on the eyes and brain. Hypnotizing really.
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Paul P
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/27 22:18:45
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The Klanghelm meters have to be adjusted to the reference you choose. If you choose -20db, and set you meters accordingly [not with the gain knob in the middle, but the (red) "VU" value at the bottom right of the meter, click and drag up/down], when the needles just touch zero the level is really at -20db. So the zero on the meter is your reference.
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BenMMusTech
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/28 00:19:25
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Ok, for me the effect buss's should always be around -18db RMS or VU meter. If you are not going back out of the box when mixing...don't worry about overs. That will be controversial to some, but trust me...don't worry about overs, unless you plan to use a lot of outboard effects. Now when it comes to sub mixes, first get the mix in order. So work out what tracks need to stand out, and what ones are in the middle, then the rest. Get the main tracks, nice and loud...so near 0 VU, the middle ones -6ish, then the rest. Now, and again this will be controversial, just let the instruments you want to sub-mix hit the channel. Don't worry about overs, unless again you're going to feed the sub-mix into an outboard device. It doesn't matter how far over you go...of course they're still limits...and you will hear them. Use the trim knob, and if you like, the tape sim...which is what I do, and line the sub-mix up to around -6 VU. Then mix the buss, use gain staging between effects by all means...but don't worry if you're going over, unless you're going out of the box. Then just turn the sub channel down to fix the mix. This is how I mix, my websites are all in my profile, if you don't believe what I am saying, or someone here says this is wrong. I stand by what I've written. This is the digital audio paradigm, and goes against what most people would tell you...because for the most part they have come up through the analogue paradigm. Not that any of the contributors here are wrong per se...it's just mixing in the box requires a new way of thinking. Peace Ben
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ULTRABRA
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/28 04:37:32
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Jeff Evans When a VU meter is swinging wildly it can mean the ballistics of the meter are telling you have not tamed the dynamics perhaps. Once you start controlling dynamics nicely the VU does not swing anywhere near as wildly. It changes quite a lot even with mild compression. What VU meters are you using as a matter of interest. Read the VU response of a real nice mixed and mastered CD. See the difference.
Hi Jeff, I understand what you mean by the dynamics may need compressing --- but as I put the VU meter as the first plugin in the chain, its coming before any compression. Isn't this how it should be done? I'm using the Klanghelm software meters at -18. I can understand how a final CD mix will have a more smooth response, but surely that is to be expected compared to individual tracks which will have relatively more dynamics? I'm still trying to figure out how best they can work for me. I've had good examples where I can see the VU meters going +4 in the red eg on a bass track - here I can easily lower the output on the soft synth to get it around 0VU and then raise the fader at output to get the right balance in the mix. But, on the othe rhad, I'm having a problem with for example sustained string patches which only get the VU flickering at -10/-7 even when the output is maxed, even though the volume output seems good. Similarly, fast sequences eg repeated 16th note patterns sometimes also show -10ish, even when the output volume is good and peaks even -2dbfs. If I raise the output there to 0VU I'm going over 0dbfs with peaks ... I guess that could be because of the fast transients, but that does not explain the sting patches showing very low in the VU.
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Jeff Evans
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/28 05:48:06
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You have brought up some excellent points. Monitoring incoming raw signals or the outputs from VST's directly with VU's are going to give you the wildest variations in VU meters for sure. If a bass VST is averaging +4 db higher than 0 then yes what you are doing is the right thing. Lower it so the output is hitting 0 dB VU. I aim to get all tracks at a similar ref rms level. Their final output is adjusted on your channel fader later in the mix to give you the right balance in the mix later on. Good example from your sustained string patches. If the level of a VST is consistently hitting -7 with its output maxed, what I do is insert gain after the VST and add 7 dB so I am getting my 0 dB VU again. Track ends up at the ref level as it should. In the mix however the track is once again set for the right balance and its channel fader may be down at -15 dB or so according to your ears. This is good because you have shown here how wildly variable the outputs from virtual instruments are. Some of mine eg Korg Wavestation can be so low I have to add 10 dB of gain to some patches just to get them up to 0 dB VU. Others I have smash the VU hard over and I have to turn their output level way down just to get the meter to sit nice at 0 dB VU. If you are wondering why I add gain to bring some VST's up to zero it is because once you have done it you won’t have to deal with it again in the mix. You will always have a healthy amount of signal to play with in your mix later on. Not so if you leave and record it way down low. You will have to add gain at some point later so why not get that out of the way. Now another excellent example with very short staccato string lines. Some patches will barely make the VU move yet be close to 0 dB FS. I have always said you need your peak metering too and in cases like this your peak meters rule. You can't let the strings clip so in these cases I just set them so the max peak is good safe distance from 0 dB FS eg 6 db or so. Dont sweat the VU's in this case. Very snappy percussion sounds are in this category too. What I do though in cases like the short string sounds is later I open them up in an editor and limit the tops of those peaks down maybe 6 or 7 dB or so then I add 6 dB or so to the whole track. That brings the rms level up without changing the staccato nature of the sound. You will barely hear the difference except you will now have a decent rms level going on as well as the attack transients. I prefer to do it this way. You could always put a limiter after the VST and add gain but then you might screw up the sound. At least with the editor you have complete control and you can always go back to the original recording if you want. And as you say even though the rms level of that sound might be down compared to others if you end up hearing it OK then it does not matter really. As long as you have enough to get that part heard in your mix. With lots of drums I have found by the time you send a whole bunch of very transient sounds that are not making a VU move much individually to a drum buss, there will be enough total rms level there to move a VU again back up to the ref level. VU's are great but you also need your peak metering and you use both at the same time. A lot of stuff though can be handled with the VU alone and the peaks are only a short level higher than rms. But you also have to be able to accept those signals with very low rms levels and high peak levels.
post edited by Jeff Evans - 2016/02/28 06:07:43
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ULTRABRA
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/02/28 06:52:01
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Thanks again Jeff ... I had just started to experiment with adding gain on those string patches - now what you said makes perfect sense there. When you say "VU's are great but you also need your peak metering and you use both at the same time" : I also just downloaded the demo of PSP Triple Meter, which shows VU, RMS, and Peak meter all in one. I found that the RMS meter there, also calibrated -18, is much easier to see - those fast sting spiccatos are showing 0 here, when the VU meter is still -3/-5 down. On other patches the VU and RMS meters are more or less same. I'm not actually sure the difference - I thought the VU meters were measuring the RMS .. anyways, that PSP RMS needle just seems to be more easy to read, less fluctuation so easy to set for 0. I'm going to use both for a while, I guess most important is not to let it get over 0VU too much, use gain where necessary, and for fast transient patches rely more on keeping the dbfs peaks in check at not past -6. I'm trusting that will get me most of the way there, safely ... :-)
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batsbrew
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/03/08 11:08:03
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FWIW.... after i get my individual track faders sitting where they need, for a basic balanced mix, i break everything up into sub busses, that all go to master... i find that after eq'ing and adding sub buss compression and limiting, i always need to reset, say, the 'guitars' sub buss.. so, basically, i end up putting automation on almost all my sub busses, the ones that have more than a couple of tracks into them, and i mix with my sub busses.. point is, i very often end up bringing my sub busses down well below 0, which is where they all start out when i'm doing basic first level checks. the thing you have to watch out for, is HOW the gain structure changes when you are pushing, say, a limiter across an overheads sub buss, when you bring the sub buss down, your level into it stays the same.... but, if you drop the levels of your channels going INTO the sub buss, the level into the limiter changes, which changes all your dynamics settings, and you have to start over. so, there is alway push and pull, but the main take away is, give yourself PLENTY of headroom. there is no downside to having tons of headroom.
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Jeff Evans
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Re: Re Busses in Gain Staging
2016/03/08 13:17:44
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I think it is important to get the balance right on each buss and yes not move track levels going into buses after you get that mix right. My buss level faders are often still at 0 dB or unity but the rms level on a buss is often below my ref level. eg If I am working at -14 all the way through a project, then buss levels will be 3 to 4 dB down on that but then the buses usually all sum back to a balanced mix sitting around -14 again which is what you want. The buses in my projects have slightly higher headroom than the tracks themselves. They are often carrying a more complex signal so they might benefit from some slight extra headroom. Headroom is great. The sound quality is very consistent over a wide range of digital ref rms levels these days. So working down at -14 or -20 is a breeze. The sound there is pristine and transient and dynamic. I rarely see overs anywhere when everything is running nice. The SPL level in your studio is an important level to set and get right. That is where you get the volume and power from your system. My system sounds devastating when I turn it up loud and I can go loud anytime and it is good to listen to a mix loud for a while. It can be very revealing. I also really like listening way down soft in mono on a small mono speaker. Gain staging is important and I never get bored talking about it. After a while every project you do ends up with levels being perfect everywhere. Tracks, buses and the final master buss. It is something that existed in the analog days and the whole concept can be lifted across into digital. It sounds better there and there is no noise now. Transients are better. As a drummer I can hear it big time. I find VU meters really help me achieve great gain staging every time. Peak metering is important now. Work with both at once.
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