I didnt ask for your Opinion; nor did me suggest those Airwindows Filters instead of the new TDR ones.
Maybe try this: info@airwindows.com
I didnt ask for your Opinion; nor did me suggest those Airwindows Filters instead of the new TDR ones.
The first page, what does the guy mean when he talks about 48k being an issue and Chris telling him to use 96k for the Airwindows plugs, I work in 48k so I'm curious now what this talk is about and how it applies to these new plugs, is it related to oversampling ?El°HYM wrote: Wed Nov 22, 2023 7:50 pm In case you are wondering why Fabien and TDR havent posted in here for Decades now. There is a, lets say, more useful thread over at GS.
https://gearspace.com/board/new-product ... lyzer.html
That makes sense and perfectly explains why I might need those filtersimrae wrote: Wed Nov 22, 2023 8:29 pm Airwindows plugins are not oversampled, Chris generally uses and recommends working at 96k which gives some ultrasonic headroom and reduces the aliasing concerns. However, while running one nonlinear effect at 96k is roughly equivalent to 2x oversampling at 48k, there is a difference if running multiple plugins in series. The first plugin might create some HF content and aliasing at ultrasonic frequences, which is ok, but then second plugin might add further HF and more aliasing which could make it all the way back down to audible frequencies. Adding ultrasonic filters between the plugins helps avoid this cumulative buildup effect, and gives something more closely equivalent to a series of oversampled effects.
Arbiter is nothing like those. It's essentially a single band dynamic eq, but unique because of its relative nature ; it works purely on frequency so isn't depending on volume threshold like with traditional dynamic eq's.Digivolt wrote: Tue Nov 21, 2023 1:55 pm So Arbiter seems closest to TEOTE, Sooth, Gullfoss, DSEQ etc, wonder how it compares, at €24 in the sale it beats them all on price
In the analog realm those are everywhere. Preamps will feature lowpass filters in the ultrasonic band, processors likewise. With tape, I think you actually have a strong ultrasonic filtering so as not to disturb the bias signal. In other words, there is no problem with minimum phase filtering.rafa1981 wrote: Wed Nov 22, 2023 8:01 amJust to inform other readers. In my opinion those Butterworths are a very bad choice. He even adds them everywhere or distributes the poles before and after non-linear processes. Even when using 44/48k they don't get disabled and have phase effects on the passband.
Note that they also had TDR ultrasonic long ago, which is a better choice than Airwindows.
https://vladgsound.wordpress.com/tag/tdr-ultrasonic/
The problem with minphase filtering for this application is:ampetrosillo wrote: Thu Nov 23, 2023 12:45 pm In the analog realm those are everywhere. Preamps will feature lowpass filters in the ultrasonic band, processors likewise. With tape, I think you actually have a strong ultrasonic filtering so as not to disturb the bias signal. In other words, there is no problem with minimum phase filtering.
TDR Ultrasonic really isn't about antialiasing, the old initial GS thread clearifies this aspect early on. Every AD will handle this fine, no need to DIY oversample AD/DAs that already operate in the MHz range anyway (usually 256 times beyond audible range, or more).imrae wrote: Wed Nov 22, 2023 8:29 pm Airwindows plugins are not oversampled, Chris generally uses and recommends working at 96k which gives some ultrasonic headroom and reduces the aliasing concerns. However, while running one nonlinear effect at 96k is roughly equivalent to 2x oversampling at 48k, there is a difference if running multiple plugins in series. The first plugin might create some HF content and aliasing at ultrasonic frequences, which is ok, but then second plugin might add further HF and more aliasing which could make it all the way back down to audible frequencies. Adding ultrasonic filters between the plugins helps avoid this cumulative buildup effect, and gives something more closely equivalent to a series of oversampled effects.
A low pass filter is going to eat, like, 0.1% CPU. Big deal.rafa1981 wrote: Thu Nov 23, 2023 3:42 pmThe problem with minphase filtering for this application is:ampetrosillo wrote: Thu Nov 23, 2023 12:45 pm In the analog realm those are everywhere. Preamps will feature lowpass filters in the ultrasonic band, processors likewise. With tape, I think you actually have a strong ultrasonic filtering so as not to disturb the bias signal. In other words, there is no problem with minimum phase filtering.
1- For the same response than a FIR brickwall, it will use more CPU, because IIR filters don't parallelize. Each filter stage depends on the output of the previous stage.
Yes, you can't mix dry signal in parallel (actually, you can; the response will essentially be a treble shelf, but OK).2- Phases are affected on the passband. The more brickwall, aka aliasing rejection, the more pronounced the effect. If you want to use a chain with this in parallel and sum/subtract to the original signal the results will be different (for better or for worse).
It depends. Also, it can get academic very fast. We essentially can't hear phase, especially in the treble, and treble content is low enough in most audio that the waveshape is unlikely to change much (therefore not reducing headroom significantly).These are digital plugins to combat digital aliasing by using a digital brickwall filter out of the passband. I don't see why a digital brickwall filter should introduce analog preamp or tape effects, isn't that the purpose of tape and preamp plugins?
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