Not to be a party pooper but I have no idea what settings MyAudioFactory used for Thiemo Stereo Tool's de-clipper, but whatever the settings are they are super badly chosen (on purpose?).DJErmac wrote: Sat Sep 21, 2024 2:36 pmAfter listening to the demos, this one seems to be the best option availabe.MyAudioFactory wrote: Fri Sep 20, 2024 7:05 am MyAudioFactory has just released a new declipper named ProAudioDeclipper, which is said to offer superior performance. A performance comparison with Perfect Declipper can be found on the following website: https://myaudiofactory.com/.
But indeed the price is steep.
Not that it’s high for what it does, as it seems amazing, but for my needs, no intro offer is a major flaw for me. I’ll wait until black friday. If nothing happens, I’ll wait until christmas. And so on.
Sorry, I don’t have a horrible sounding file every day, only a few I’d like to try to repair. And I’d love to try it on drums to find out what I can get : more punch or not, when the transients are heavily clipped. In a few words it totally looks like a random results tool to me : $99 simply for trying to get something better sometimes is too much.![]()
Just to make you realize what your potential customers may be after.
Maybe he just stuck to default settings without realizing that they are obviously NOT meant for -12dB clipped material but instead are optimally setup to fix small and short clippings that happen every once in a while.. not full on distorted audio?
However Stereo Tool's de-clipper is more than capable of tackling fully clipped tracks. For instance you need to tweak the "Maximum allowed clipped peaks" slider if you are dealing with extremely clipped material and you can also further tweak the "rubber band" settings that track the waveform if things are constantly clipped.
With the provided -12dB clipped examples I can get cleaner results with Stereo Tool than the de-clipped examples from ProAudioClipper. Then again, I do know what I'm doing and am comfortable using the numerous different controls so perhaps ProAudioClipper is a better "set and forget" tool. That is possible.
