Ooook then....
Randyman,
Glad to hear you don't have this problem but that does not mean that it doesn't exist.
I've been working in many professional studios over the years and this issue sometimes happens,
and when it does - it can be a disaster.
You don't seem to understand the concept of a limiter.
A limiter would not reduce the signal by -1 dB. I meant that the threshold could be set to - 1dBfs
in order to not affect the music.
You don't get my point regarding gainstaging either.
Reducing the listeninglevel is not the answer here.
In the mixing process it's important to be able to listen at higher levels and still have plenty of headroom
in order to sum/mix and use dynamic processors.
Please read my post again before you answer -
that way this disussusion will be alot easier and migh produce some useful insights/results.
Sorry Randyman, I don't mean to be rude.
:-)
Viper, you're right. A lookahead limiter would not be a good idea. My misstake. fryingpan
A limiter would, though.
I don't see how a hardware limiter would cause a delay if it is implemented after the D/A.
I'm of course refering to an analog limiter.
BUT it would be more expensive and affect the audio quality, so a software limiter is indeed the best solution.
If -1 dBfs feels to risky one could simply lower the threshold, no problem.
It's plain stupid to mix close to the zero anyway.
And, in the final process, when things are pushed closer to the top, you simply switch the limiter off
and it can no longer affect the audio.
I agree that it might be desirable to have some kind of intelligent protection that detects corrupt audio data and resets the driver or mutes audio - or something like this.
But if that would be so easy without loosing a transparent audio channel - I guess RME had already implemented it.
Glad you see you agree. Though I would not assume that RMEs products are so perfect they couldn't benefit
from certain improvements.
I'm quite sure this would be a very useful addition to their otherwise great units and software.
Regards
Lachlan