Outboard-C a compressor that listens back

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Outboard Audio has released Outboard-C, a studio compressor for Windows and
macOS built around four voicings, a servo that continuously rides the
threshold, and a sidechain section deep enough to replace a second plugin.


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Outboard-C is built to be precise when a mix needs surgery and musical when
it needs to glue. Four voicings — Clean, Classic, Optical, Vocal — and four
directions — Compress, Inflate, Expand, Shape — sit behind the same set of
knobs, so switching character never means losing the settings you dialed in.
Classic and Optical switch the detector to a feedback topology for the
smoother, self-limiting gait of classic studio and opto-style hardware;
Clean stays a neutral, precise feed-forward compressor for mix bus and
mastering work; Vocal is tuned specifically for the voice.


A Threshold That Listens Back

Most compressors leave finding the right threshold to your ears and a
static setting. Outboard-C's Auto-Threshold is a continuous servo: it rides
the threshold so the average gain reduction settles on a musical target,
independent of input level, with a silence gate so it never chases room
tone between phrases. The Threshold knob and the transfer curve move live
while it works — switch it off at any point and the value it found is kept,
turning it into a fast way to find a starting po
riding tool.

Ballistics are calibrated the same honest way: dial in 20 ms of Attack and
the plugin measures 20 ms (10%-90% of the gain-reduction transition) — not
a number picked to look good on a spec sheet. Curve shapes knee hardness
and level-dependent ratio together in one control; Smooth crossfades into a
decoupled detector for springy, click-free releases; Pump scales release
time to the programme's crest factor for snappier or glued behaviour
depending on what's hitting the compressor.

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Built for Modern Production

- Headroom: a bipolar trim right at the Threshold knob — run the whole
engine colder (more reserve, less reach) or hotter (denser, more colour)
at a compensated output level, inspired by classic console headroom
calibration
- Shape stage: a saturation path with antiderivative anti-aliasing and up
to 32x oversampling, from a barely-there fattening to a fully committed
clip
- Measured Auto-Gain: compares actual loudness in and out and compensates,
so A/B comparisons stay honest instead of "louder equals better"
- Variable, smoothed lookahead from -20 to +20 ms — zero added latency at
the default setting
- Full parallel/dry blend, Wet M/S balance, Range cap (or uncapped), and a
Delta mode that plays back only what the compressor is changing
- A live display: transfer curve with a moving operating point, scrolling
input/output/gain-reduction history, peak-hold meters and a running LUFS
readout
- 76 factory presets across ten categories, a personal Default slot, and
favorites that sync across every instance on the machine
- Machined-metal knob styling with a deliberately high-contrast readout
ring around every control, so settings stay legible even in a crowded
session


A Sidechain Section Worth Using

Ext SC listens to the host's sidechain input for real ducking, and SC
Listen makes the detector itself audible — instant confirmation that
routing is working before you second-guess a patch. Stereo detection runs
L/R or M/S, including a Max-linked variant, with stepless Link, Swap, and
independent Wet-1/Wet-2 amounts per detector branch. Sidechain Tone adds
four broad, resonance-free bands that tilt only what the compressor hears,
never the audio itself — and underneath that sits a fully parametric
8-band EQ for the detector alone, with per-band type, slope, frequency,
gain, Q, and solo. De-essing, frequency-aware ducking, and multiband
triggers all live inside one plugin.

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A Few Things To Try

_Instant Mix-Bus Glue: Classic voicing, Auto-Threshold engaged, a gentle
2:1 ratio. Let the servo settle for a few bars and the bus locks together
without ever touching the Threshold knob by hand.

_Vocal Riding Without a Fader: Vocal voicing, Auto-Threshold on, Smooth
around 40%. The servo chases the performance, so quiet phrases come
forward and loud ones get pulled back automatically.

_A Kick That Only Hears the Kick: Route a kick to the sidechain input,
enable Ext SC, then pull Sidechain Tone's HI and HM down so hats and snare
bleed stop triggering the pump — only the low thump gets through.

_De-Essing With No Second Plugin: Open the 8-band sidechain EQ, add a peak
band around 6-8 kHz, solo it to dial in the exact sibilant frequency, then
let a fast Attack/Release pair do the rest.

_Parallel Punch on Drums: Shape direction, Drive past halfway, Dry blended
in around 40-60%. The crushed, saturated wet signal sits under the clean
transient for dense, New-York-style drum bus compression.

_Angrier Glue on Demand: Same Classic voicing, same knob positions — just
drop Headroom into negative territory. The threshold digs in harder and
the Shape stage saturates sooner, for a denser, more aggressive bus at the
same settings.

_Honest A/B Testing: Turn Measured Auto-Gain on before comparing bypass
against processed. It compensates for the loudness actually removed, so a
heavier setting doesn't just win the comparison because it's louder.


Availability

Outboard-C is available now for Windows (VST3, CLAP) and macOS (VST3, AU,
CLAP) at €65, with a full 14-day trial — the complete plugin, every
feature unlocked, no account required to download. The plugin has passed
pluginval at the highest strictness level.

Right now, all Outboard plugins — including Outboard-C — are 45% off with code WM2026

More information, the trial download, and the full feature list:
https://outboard.audio/outboard-compressor (https://outboard.audio/outboard-compressor)

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Your site is an AI generated mess full of errors, so I'm assuming your products are, as well.
Screen Shot 2026-07-06 at 01.29.50.png
Screen Shot 2026-07-06 at 01.30.28.png
I'm pretty sure even your forum post is AI generated.
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Well it does came in CLAP :lol: , 65 euros for a fly-by rando is a bit rich. (I guess tokens are expensive)
I do agree over verbose on the features is pure a clanker LLM write up.
I'm a dumb hairless monke

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edit: double post
Last edited by tumface on Mon Jul 06, 2026 10:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Forget verbose. The claims about Pro-Q 4 aren't even accurate.

I don't think this is a real company. They have no headquarters or office listed, just an email address on their own domain, and look at their legal page:
Screen Shot 2026-07-07 at 07.33.02.png
Their company name is [Provider] apparently. Great.
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I don't think these are vibe coded, AI was used for writing the English copy on the site is more like it. Of course, I can't say for sure...

Seems a nice compressor at any rate.

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It looks vibe coded or at least mostly coded by AI to me.

A lot of these AI things "seem nice" until you realize the marketing page is lying and half of the features don't work right (or don't exist) and it's a mess. It took me a bit to adapt but now I realize you can't trust these pages at all, they have no inhibition for outright lying. The person who ran the AI might not even know the claims are wrong, because they're listening to the AI saying it's true.

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I tried the EQ prior to this, it uses too much cpu to be vibe coded if you ask me. Also another developer has pretty much vouched for this guy in another thread as a personal friend, I tend to believe him. This stuff also seems too sophisticated for vibe coding. YMMV

Nothing personal, but I think many of the vibe coding complaints these days are unfounded
and nothing more than paranoia, not always, but mostly. YMMV

For one thing, the bulk of them freely admit to something being vibe coded, ime.

*Not like I'm going to buy this though, can't afford it atm anyway.

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I think that might have been true a couple of months ago, but lately I'm seeing more threads where the poster will dodge the question, vanish, or only admit it after being questioned.

Paranoia would imply I'm fearful or threatened somehow and that it's unfounded. I'm not fearful or threatened (I don't develop plugins) and I have a good reason to believe this is AI coded, because the product page and forum post are both AI generated, the product page has incorrect information in it, and the company appears to be fake.

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There is also another trend happening that might lead to some confusion I think. A lot of web developers are breaking into the market with new plugin lines due to some new technologies being introduced. WebView2 and a lot of javascript audio extensions, even whole javascript frameworks for audio development. Well, not really new tech I guess, improved tech is prob more like it.

So that's a whole other thing...
Last edited by pekbro on Tue Jul 07, 2026 12:22 am, edited 1 time in total.

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tumface wrote: Mon Jul 06, 2026 11:57 pm I think that might have been true a couple of months ago, but lately I'm seeing more threads where the poster will dodge the question, vanish, or only admit it after being questioned.

Paranoia would imply I'm fearful or threatened somehow and that it's unfounded. I'm not fearful or threatened (I don't develop plugins) and I have a good reason to believe this is AI coded, because the product page and forum post are both AI generated, the product page has incorrect information in it, and the company appears to be fake.
I use paranoia for lack of a better word, in any event I can not disprove what you're saying.
You may be right. A lot of times though, if you look carefully through the websites, they
often list the AI involvement. This is not true for every one them for sure.

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Yeah, I did understand what you meant, though. It's likely I'm applying too much skepticism in some cases…

edit: nah I think this is the appropriate amount of skepticism :P

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