Golden Audio Channel--Kjaerhus
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 503 posts since 28 Mar, 2005 from Annapolis, MD
Thanks for the breakdown GAC. The more I use it the more I like it. I'm considering a purchase. Why do you say that GPP1 does something that nothing out there can do. I already have Elephant (and Vintage Warmer) and thought that that Finis (Elemental Audio) was superior when I tried out the demo. What does GPP1 have that these other limiters do not? (Smoother, no latency?)
- KVRAF
- 6478 posts since 16 Dec, 2002
The difference is that GPP1 is a limiter with a sound, and the others you mentioned are for transparent mastering use.feyshay wrote:What does GPP1 have that these other limiters do not? (Smoother, no latency?)
GPP1 works a whole lot better within mixdowns, as it does sound shaping too. It's not really subtle, although it can do that too.
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- KVRist
- 478 posts since 14 Jan, 2003 from Denmark
Greetings,
The main difference between a mastering limiter and the GPP-1 is that the GPP-1 is compressing the peaks and not necessarily limiting them (it got adjustable knee where master limiters got a fixed hard knee). In the "old days" you would get a somewhat similar effect when recording to a tape since peaks would be compressed by tape saturation. It is good for taming peaks without squashing them.
/Torben
The main difference between a mastering limiter and the GPP-1 is that the GPP-1 is compressing the peaks and not necessarily limiting them (it got adjustable knee where master limiters got a fixed hard knee). In the "old days" you would get a somewhat similar effect when recording to a tape since peaks would be compressed by tape saturation. It is good for taming peaks without squashing them.
/Torben
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- KVRAF
- 2565 posts since 30 Mar, 2004 from Phoenix AZ USA
Or in other words ...... Very musicalTorben wrote:Greetings,
The main difference between a mastering limiter and the GPP-1 is that the GPP-1 is compressing the peaks and not necessarily limiting them (it got adjustable knee where master limiters got a fixed hard knee). In the "old days" you would get a somewhat similar effect when recording to a tape since peaks would be compressed by tape saturation. It is good for taming peaks without squashing them.
/Torben
