As I wrote in my first reply: A clipper can be seen as a brickwall limiter with instant release.Compyfox wrote:mauseoleum wrote:A clipper, on the other hand, does not operate on a principle of gain reduction cell and envelope signal - it does not have any time-constantWell, then how can it be described if we go by the definitions I started in the first post?Kim (esoundz) wrote:Mauseoleum is right that clippers usually aren't implemented in the same way limiters are. Clippers usually don't have a gain reduction circuit - their internal design is closer to distortion than compression. For the purposes of this discussion, however, it makes sense to describe their behaviour in terms that can be compared to limiters.
Even within the constrains of instant attack and infinite threshold, there are still many variables. A lot of the character of a limiter comes from the release curve and how the curve and time respond to the audio.Compyfox wrote:Funny though that some so called "brickwall limiters" work with microseconds, some even millisecond values to be called "brickwall". So what's the actual deal here?Kim (esoundz) wrote:No, by 'instant', I mean it really is instant. Any sample that exceeds the threshold is reduced.
If it's only a "brickwall limiter" if we go by two needed facts: being digital and sample based limitng, then why are so many tools called "brickwall limiter"?
Examples: Kjaerhus MPL-1 Pro, T-Racks 3 Brickwall Limiter (works with 0,05ms attack), Waves L1, etc.
Normally a brickwall limiter doesn't have an attack control, but the T-RackS brickwall limiter has one because it actually feeds the limiter into a hard clipper. A longer attack time allows you to clip the transients instead of gain-reduce them. It's a different sound.
A clipper doesn't have 'nearly' instant attack and release. It *is* instant. A clipper's waveshaping curve operating similarly to a hard/soft knee.Compyfox wrote:So a "clipper" without attack/release, or nearly instant attack/release (microseconds again) is in basic theory a limiter with different knee values, no? (see T-Racks Clipper)Kim (esoundz) wrote:Lookahead isn't necessary, but is often implemented to reduce distortion. Without lookahead, a brickwall limiter will operate a bit like a clipper during the attack phase.
It certainly is!Compyfox wrote:Understandable, but isn't the discussion in here insteresting as well?Kim (esoundz) wrote:I use my blog so that my posts are easier to find and available to a wider audience.
-Kim.