Magneto vs. PSP Vintage Warmer

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Do these essentially do the same thing?

dano
"In a sky full of people, only some want to fly,
Isn’t that crazy?"

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yeah, they both suck.

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Don't worry danielmm - someone who's actually got a clue & isn't on the rag will hopefully impart some actual knowledge here soon.

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snooky wrote:yeah, they both suck.
:?

seems like you've reached your tipping point man.

maybe take a brake from the computer. hang out with those who love you unconditionally. smoke a little. listen to bob marley. it's not all bad, ya know? stay up boy! :D :D :D :D :D :D

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----On paper they are essentially the same kind of thing, while Magneto has fewer controls. I'm not convinced about "analog warmers", or "exciters" of any kind myself, so I probably shouldn't add any opinion to this post.

Jeff

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They can both do tape saturation effects, so they do the same thing, though I would say that the PSP VintageWarmer does sound better, but that's subjetive.. Oh well, it's a forum, who cares :P
I'm a Jugga Nut!

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I've always used magneto because of its stability and ease of use. PSP VintageWarmer is perfectly fine. Both do the same thing. Essentially when you use any of the "warming" effects you're just adding compression with a fixed eq. YMMV.
Morningwood Productions
"If its Morningwood, Its good."

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producer2k wrote:I've always used magneto because of its stability and ease of use. PSP VintageWarmer is perfectly fine. Both do the same thing. Essentially when you use any of the "warming" effects you're just adding compression with a fixed eq. YMMV.

Thats a fairly good sum of things, although people often mistake slamming these things for tape effect whenb in reality both of these sound better in moduration and impart a very warm character, I for ONE am convinced these are quality tools, especially for real TRACKs.. Works great on heavy guitars, bass, drums hell I use them all the time , but of course you can slam the hell out of them if you'd like for a certain sound..
Although the VW is more in terms of uses, It is useable on the mixbuss or in the mastering stage, I have tried slapping Magneto in the mix buss in Cubase and I am not to fond of it.
Finally yes they do DO the same thing albeit they sound different from one another so for me they both get a lot of use but VW is probably a little better for most things.

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Used to use magneto, but Vintage Warmer kicks its butt. It doesn't seem to get much hype around here, which is just fine with me... I'll continue to use it on EVERYTHING. ;)

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producer2k wrote:I've always used magneto because of its stability and ease of use. PSP VintageWarmer is perfectly fine. Both do the same thing. Essentially when you use any of the "warming" effects you're just adding compression with a fixed eq. YMMV.
its more than that, the phase is altered and distortion/harmonics added, limiting type compression (assuming you're slamming and not using comp functions). i dont know what you mean by fixed eq? they dont impart a fixed eq curve as far as i know.

if all you want is warmth type thing, then warmifier is the one, imo.

regards,

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Voxengo Lampthruster deserves a place in this list too :)

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liars&ashes wrote:----On paper they are essentially the same kind of thing, while Magneto has fewer controls. I'm not convinced about "analog warmers", or "exciters" of any kind myself, so I probably shouldn't add any opinion to this post.

Jeff
Isn't Magneto 'Cubase SX only' ? Or does it come as a seperate vst as well? :?
Last edited by Improv on Sat Jan 07, 2006 7:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Improv wrote:
liars&ashes wrote:----On paper they are essentially the same kind of thing, while Magneto has fewer controls. I'm not convinced about "analog warmers", or "exciters" of any kind myself, so I probably shouldn't add any opinion to this post.

Jeff
Isn't Magneto 'Cubase only' ? Or does it come as a seperate vst as well? :?
Cubase ONly and not only that but it is not even useable in Wavelab for example

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martian wrote:
producer2k wrote:I've always used magneto because of its stability and ease of use. PSP VintageWarmer is perfectly fine. Both do the same thing. Essentially when you use any of the "warming" effects you're just adding compression with a fixed eq. YMMV.
its more than that, the phase is altered and distortion/harmonics added, limiting type compression (assuming you're slamming and not using comp functions). i dont know what you mean by fixed eq? they dont impart a fixed eq curve as far as i know.

if all you want is warmth type thing, then warmifier is the one, imo.

regards,
I didnt read the fixed Eq part, I was agreeing with it adding a type of compression and these plugs are defintly adding harmonics to the signal.

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Killvehicle wrote:
Improv wrote:
liars&ashes wrote:----On paper they are essentially the same kind of thing, while Magneto has fewer controls. I'm not convinced about "analog warmers", or "exciters" of any kind myself, so I probably shouldn't add any opinion to this post.

Jeff
Isn't Magneto 'Cubase only' ? Or does it come as a seperate vst as well? :?
Cubase ONly and not only that but it is not even useable in Wavelab for example
Damn you're fast! You just beat the 2 minute reply! :lol:

I'm pretty sure that my SX 2 has magneto, but I've used VW for some tape sat stuff, never tried the Magneto. Of course Magneto wouldn't do much good when I'm using T2, Podium or eXT.

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