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Gps Online
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- Posts: 3331
- Joined: Sat Sep 13, 2014 1:28 pm
Thu Apr 16, 2015 11:23 am
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Gps » Thu Apr 16, 2015 11:23 am
Stakeout Punch wrote:Gps wrote:Over steering in sound happens, when you record too loud.
Its the same sound you get as when you turn up the volume in lmms too high.
That's just called clipping. Overloading a signal is
sometimes referred to as over
driving. I have never heard over-steering actually used, and I work part time in a studio.
A proper mix will result in a balanced sound that doesn't clip. I say clip and not "red on LMMS's mixer" because the mixer's visuals are horribly inaccurate. Try it yourself! Place a hard limiter on the master channel, set it to 0dB, and blast some sound (that would otherwise clip). Notice where 0dB sits. However, it's still a good practice to avoid high levels (0dB, and honestly anything above -6dB) in your mixes. Mix quietly, mastering is what normalizes the track and brings the perceived loudness up.
A good method is to set each FX fader in use to 80%, then individually set each instrument/track to 0%. Start gradually turning individual tracks up in volume until it sounds balanced and the master channel doesn't peak over around -6dB. Use the FX mixer to fine tune levels and effects once you get the rough mix done. If you aren't familiar with mastering, a quick and dirty way is to load a limiter with a medium-high gain with the hard limit at -0.5dB or 0dB. I don't recommend that method, if you are familiar with limiters and compression feel free to go about it differently.
Thank you. About the words over steering, the problem is probably me translating a dutch word, and some of my native English speaking friends, claiming its the right word. When I gooogled on over steering in sound, I got 0 hits, so you’re probably right.
I learned this word ( in dutch) back in the good ? old days when I recorded music to music cassettes.
I have problems like this a lot with technical terms. Most translation sites, ( Dutch to English) don't do technical terms.
At work we usual had two dictionaries, a standard dutch to English, and a technical dutch to English.
When I use the site TecDic it gives me, three options.
Overdrive, overload and ship.
That site is basically made by (dutch) technicians, and is not an official dictionary.