greendor, awake the Sherlock in you ...
SPAN
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- KVRAF
- 1907 posts since 29 Oct, 2003
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- KVRist
- 172 posts since 9 Mar, 2001
AFAIK, it runs back to the way Steinberg work out the RMS of a sine wave normalised to 0dB. The industry decided that a 0dB sine wave mathematically has an RMS of 0dB - this is the standard used by Bob Katz etc. For reasons I'm not sure of, Steinberg worked it out to -3dB RMS instead of 0dB, hence the drop in 3dB between the two scales.
Aleksey just decided to helpfully include both scales when working with SPAN. Don't blame him for the two scales!
You can verify this in Wavelab...
Aleksey just decided to helpfully include both scales when working with SPAN. Don't blame him for the two scales!
You can verify this in Wavelab...
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- KVRAF
- 5851 posts since 9 Jul, 2002 from Helsinki
The original question was what the two values mean, and it's been explained now - other is plain RMS, other +3db for mastering purposes, apparently some experienced guy thinks that it's beneficial to adjust the visual scale. (ok, it's a bit confusing in this topic which one is the added value, but that should be pretty evident in the plugin).
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- KVRian
- 769 posts since 2 Apr, 2005
OK - i'm not blaming Voxengo - just trying to understand. From the Elephant manual, Aleksey says: "+3 dB metering option is useful exactly when you are using Katz's metering systems. K-14 AFAIK is RMS -14 dB, peak RMS -10 dB. These figures incorporate +3 dB correction. So, after enabling the +3 dB correction you can examine your levels against Katz's metering system just by examining RMS and peak RMS figures"
I've been Googling, and it appears that the definition of 0dB RMS is a source of much confusion. It seems a lot of DAW meters are wrong - now I don't know who to trust. I agree, it's good that Voxengo has the option. Still totally confused and looking for answers ...
I've been Googling, and it appears that the definition of 0dB RMS is a source of much confusion. It seems a lot of DAW meters are wrong - now I don't know who to trust. I agree, it's good that Voxengo has the option. Still totally confused and looking for answers ...
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- KVRist
- 172 posts since 9 Mar, 2001
For the AES standard of metering: 0dB peak sine wave = 0db RMS
For Steinberg's standard: 0dB peak sine wave = -3dB RMS
For Steinberg's standard: 0dB peak sine wave = -3dB RMS
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- KVRAF
- 2247 posts since 13 Dec, 2003
csl wrote:For the AES standard of metering: 0dB peak sine wave = 0db RMS
For Steinberg's standard: 0dB peak sine wave = -3dB RMS
pls tell me some proper metering tools for Cubase SX
then?
I'm very confused....
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- KVRist
- 172 posts since 9 Mar, 2001
Since Cubase doesn't use RMS metering what's the problem? RMS tends to be used in mastering to measure overall loudness - for mixing in Cubase you use peak meters.
Seriously, it doesn't matter - just use whichever standard's available. If you want to follow the K standards then use SPAN, looking at the lower RMS value.
Seriously, it doesn't matter - just use whichever standard's available. If you want to follow the K standards then use SPAN, looking at the lower RMS value.
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- KVRian
- 769 posts since 2 Apr, 2005
Don't you mean the higher RMS value? Confusing ... aren't we saying that the lower scale gives a peak of -3dB for a 'full scale sine wave' (which I don't understand - how can it be full scale?). From what i'm reading, Katz and the AES say that 0dB RMS is defined as a full scale sine wave peaking at 0dB - which makes more sense. So isn't that the higher one?
- KVRAF
- 4030 posts since 7 Sep, 2002
greendoor, RMS power of a full scale sinewave ALWAYS equals -3 dBFS. It's pure mathematics. That +3 dB correction arised from the idea that sine peaking at 0 dBFS should also have 0 dBFS power. Of course, that's wrong from the mathematical point of view. But now we have to live with that, and always wonder how RMS is represented in a particular program. There's no set 'professional' standard on RMS power representation I know of.
That's why I'm offering two approaches in both SPAN and Elephant meters.
That's why I'm offering two approaches in both SPAN and Elephant meters.
- KVRAF
- 4030 posts since 7 Sep, 2002
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- KVRist
- 172 posts since 9 Mar, 2001
Noooo. We're not talking about *peak* values, just *RMS* values.greendoor wrote:Don't you mean the higher RMS value? Confusing ... aren't we saying that the lower scale gives a peak of -3dB for a 'full scale sine wave' (which I don't understand - how can it be full scale?). From what i'm reading, Katz and the AES say that 0dB RMS is defined as a full scale sine wave peaking at 0dB - which makes more sense. So isn't that the higher one?
Higher, lower, I forget which one's which...
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- KVRian
- 769 posts since 2 Apr, 2005
Thanks Aleksey - I now see that this is an industry problem, and you are very good to cater for both camps. Examples of a K-14 meter are pictured here: http://www.digido.com/portal/pmodule_id ... page_id=59
- KVRAF
- 4030 posts since 7 Sep, 2002
I've released SPAN 1.6 - it features metering system switch and allows to select differet K bases. http://www.voxengo.com/
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- KVRian
- 1394 posts since 28 Mar, 2002 from Austria
Great !!Aleksey Vaneev wrote:I've released SPAN 1.6 - it features metering system switch and allows to select differet K bases. http://www.voxengo.com/
