Alternative to Flux Pure Analyzer's Stereo Spectrogram

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Looking for an alternative to the stereo section of the Flux Pure Analyzer (the far left module in the picture below).

https://shop.flux.audio/media/cache/syl ... b66c32.png

It displays the stereo position by frequency.

EDIT: Plus if it's a standalone plugin and not a metering suite, I have the majority of the other meters.
Last edited by Aesaire on Sat Nov 14, 2020 4:11 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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izotope insight 2

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NUGEN Visualizer
SPL Hawk Eye

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izotope insight 2
SPL Hawk Eye
Both of these don't have a stereo spectrogram. Just vectorscopes.
NUGEN Visualizer
This has one.

I'd prefer a standalone plugin though, as I already have all the other meters. Prefer not to spend $200 on one meter.

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https://www.voxengo.com/product/correlometer/

doesn't display position but it displays corellation per band.

else, DMG Trackmeter has exactly what flux has - they call it "Phase Spectrum"
https://dmgaudio.com/products_trackmeter.php
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Brainworx bx_panEQ does this

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DMG Trackmeter and Brainworx bx_panEQ fit the bill, thanks for the suggestions.

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An alternative display approach, while not as nice as the Flux style, is to use Voxengo Span overlaying Left and Right channels and observing which is higher.

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ericzang wrote: Sun Nov 15, 2020 5:48 am An alternative display approach, while not as nice as the Flux style, is to use Voxengo Span overlaying Left and Right channels and observing which is higher.
If the sound is completely mono, the L R graphs will completely overlap. However, if the L R graphs are at around the same level but differ slightly you can't really tell how wide the sound is right?
Last edited by Aesaire on Sun Nov 15, 2020 3:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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EDIT: Double post.

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EDIT: Delete please.

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Aesaire wrote: Sun Nov 15, 2020 3:45 pm
ericzang wrote: Sun Nov 15, 2020 5:48 am An alternative display approach, while not as nice as the Flux style, is to use Voxengo Span overlaying Left and Right channels and observing which is higher.
If the sound is completely mono, the L R graphs will completely overlap. However, if the L R graphs are at around the same level but differ slightly you can't really tell how wide the sound is right?
Correct. They could be the same level and frequency but out of phase and graphs will overlap. (Not sure how flux and DMG display that)

That’s why i use correlometer (voxengo freebie) which shows you how much stereo you have per band. Seems much more useful than frequency field position
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Not sure how flux and DMG display that
https://shop.flux.audio/media/cache/syl ... b66c32.png

If the sound is mono, it will be close to a vertical line in the center. Check the sub bass frequencies in the picture above, just one line. If the sound is balanced but wide, it will be a long horizontal line on the graph, indicating that it has signal on both L and R.

Correlometer is super useful for checking phase. However, the stereo spectrogram let's you pull up a reference track and learn their stereo positioning at their respective frequencies.

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But Hawkeye has such a view, that's the 'Pano/Phase' graph, if I understand you correctly. You see the stereo panorama per frequency in the graph and above that the correlation meter (phase) in two stripes.
https://files.plugin-alliance.com/produ ... ual_en.pdf

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ReleaseCandidate wrote: Fri Nov 20, 2020 3:03 pm But Hawkeye has such a view, that's the 'Pano/Phase' graph, if I understand you correctly. You see the stereo panorama per frequency in the graph and above that the correlation meter (phase) in two stripes.
https://files.plugin-alliance.com/produ ... ual_en.pdf
I missed this when I skimmed through the manual. Thanks for correcting me.

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