TritoneDigital.. hydratone, Voxengo and Kjaerhus, Fear it!
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- KVRist
- 494 posts since 18 Jul, 2004
if some of you people don't hear a difference, it's ok, use what you like to achieve what you want. but don't say there isn't one. you can download demos of all products and test yourself, maybe some of you don't know what to listen for, try the following:
get a snare on 5 channels, one with hydratone, one with equim, one with sonalksis, one with kjaerhus golden eq, one with HarmoniEQ. once again, try to boost 5k with 4db with a q=1(try to match them), match the loudness and LISTEN. sonalksis, equim, kjaerhus and HarmoniEQ will all sound pretty similar, each with it's own little 'signature-sound'(especially harmonie), but pretty similar, i would call that the typical 'digital-sound', maybe you like that sound, i don't. it's like the original snare with 4db at 5k, but it doesn't sound as one unit. when you listen to hydratone, it's a different world. the 4db at 5k get into the snare, they become one. i'm not a native english speaker so maybe some will have problems with this explanation. i'm sure bmaniac knows what i mean, right?
if you don't care about that, use whatever you like, if i could i would use hydratone on each channel.
the other mentioned eqs are all great digital eqs, but IMHO no one of them touches hydratone when you boost.
@ronny pries: you should test eqs, not read about them in online-forums.
get a snare on 5 channels, one with hydratone, one with equim, one with sonalksis, one with kjaerhus golden eq, one with HarmoniEQ. once again, try to boost 5k with 4db with a q=1(try to match them), match the loudness and LISTEN. sonalksis, equim, kjaerhus and HarmoniEQ will all sound pretty similar, each with it's own little 'signature-sound'(especially harmonie), but pretty similar, i would call that the typical 'digital-sound', maybe you like that sound, i don't. it's like the original snare with 4db at 5k, but it doesn't sound as one unit. when you listen to hydratone, it's a different world. the 4db at 5k get into the snare, they become one. i'm not a native english speaker so maybe some will have problems with this explanation. i'm sure bmaniac knows what i mean, right?
if you don't care about that, use whatever you like, if i could i would use hydratone on each channel.
the other mentioned eqs are all great digital eqs, but IMHO no one of them touches hydratone when you boost.
@ronny pries: you should test eqs, not read about them in online-forums.
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- KVRAF
- 2049 posts since 18 Sep, 2003 from Seattle USA
Hmm - I'll have to check that out -you're saying that it compensates it's output level to account for filter gain changes ? Nice...bmanic wrote:Nyquist EQ...because of the way it operates and keeps the output level steady.
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- KVRAF
- 1907 posts since 29 Oct, 2003
If your host lets you access it's hidden parameters or flip into non-gui state, it's even nicer.
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- KVRian
- 1219 posts since 12 Aug, 2002
In other words, Sascha is saying an expert with a slingshot is more deadly than a baboon in a medium tank.Sascha Franck wrote:This is just too much theoretical talk - everybody should learn how to do good music using good sources first and then learn how to mix the results of that halfway properly.
And I am quite inclined to agree with that.
To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders - Lao Tzu
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- KVRist
- 494 posts since 18 Jul, 2004
that's true and pops always up in discussions like that. but you need the right tool for the right job, an expert has also his preferences and tools he likes the most for certain jobs. and this has nothing to do with the subject of differences in equalizers.kilroy wrote:In other words, Sascha is saying an expert with a slingshot is more deadly than a baboon in a medium tank.Sascha Franck wrote:This is just too much theoretical talk - everybody should learn how to do good music using good sources first and then learn how to mix the results of that halfway properly.
And I am quite inclined to agree with that.
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- TopModernGeezer
- 2679 posts since 14 Mar, 2001 from Stuttgart, Germany
ahh .. it´s a really new feeling for me to say "my fave EQ is, cause i love its sound" .. but here i am, jaha! 
putte
putte
- KVRAF
- 4030 posts since 7 Sep, 2002
defjamm, interesting comments on the Hydratone... I have not tried it myself - I will test it when it is released.
I'm doing my own research on the EQs, and so I have to ask you: could you describe the sound of Hydratone as consistent? Does it sound equally 'glueing' on all Freq/Gain/Q settings, or are there any 'blind spots' where it sounds like a normal digital EQ? I assume you were testing without any Fire functions enabled.
I'm doing my own research on the EQs, and so I have to ask you: could you describe the sound of Hydratone as consistent? Does it sound equally 'glueing' on all Freq/Gain/Q settings, or are there any 'blind spots' where it sounds like a normal digital EQ? I assume you were testing without any Fire functions enabled.
- KVRAF
- 6478 posts since 16 Dec, 2002
Aleksey,
defjamm is in the ballpark with his description. It has a sound of its own. Generally it doesn't have that clean and 'static' digital sound to it. The "glueing" is IMO due to the way it handles transients. It lifts them (in boosting) in a very effortless way. Similarly in cuts you can't quite hear the "muffled" phase artifacts more audible with the cleaner static cuts of digital. Sounds sort of like a new kind of transfer function that perfectly follows the rising and falling slopes of the boosted/cut transients' phase and compensates for the artifacts...
It still seems to have a slight "accuracy" problem, hard to describe it. It's a "blunt" carving tool. Hence my comments about preferring the hi-end digital EQs.
defjamm is in the ballpark with his description. It has a sound of its own. Generally it doesn't have that clean and 'static' digital sound to it. The "glueing" is IMO due to the way it handles transients. It lifts them (in boosting) in a very effortless way. Similarly in cuts you can't quite hear the "muffled" phase artifacts more audible with the cleaner static cuts of digital. Sounds sort of like a new kind of transfer function that perfectly follows the rising and falling slopes of the boosted/cut transients' phase and compensates for the artifacts...
It still seems to have a slight "accuracy" problem, hard to describe it. It's a "blunt" carving tool. Hence my comments about preferring the hi-end digital EQs.
- KVRAF
- 6478 posts since 16 Dec, 2002
The description was pretty accurate without resorting to images and scientific analysis. From experience I can tell that the violin maker in question is used to and knows how to decipher that kind of language.007 wrote:Hmmm...I imagined what would happen if I describe the sound of a violin to a violin maker using the explanation above.
In other words, it sounds warm?
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- KVRist
- 146 posts since 21 Jan, 2004
Just a joke. He indeed understands that but it is not the language he uses to describe sound.
I actually made some violins, never heard that language.
I actually made some violins, never heard that language.
Last edited by 007 on Tue Feb 22, 2005 8:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
- KVRAF
- 6478 posts since 16 Dec, 2002
Winetasting, anyone? 
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- KVRian
- 1394 posts since 28 Mar, 2002 from Austria
I wonder also, because some compare HarmoniEQ to Hydratone (HarmoniEQ=PC, Hydratone=Mac) ?!Ralf23 wrote:Is it possible to get a demo-version of hydratone for PC ?
