Being a mixing engineer i am a little (ok a lot) anal about sound quality etc. I decided to put the bigwigs inbuilt devices to test against some of my other more established 3rd party tools.
Firstly i compared Bitwigs EQ5 against the Waves SSL eq. I used pink noise and heavily boost a low mid frequency and then did a complete sweep with the highs. I tried to match the two as close as possible by ear.
The result was this:
(audio ) https://audiofreaks.box.com/s/76h68t9jyz3dgyk2bwro
(image) https://audiofreaks.box.com/s/6wl8c31mrmj43xrh49an
Basically this file is a splice between the EQ5 and the SSL-E - see what you think. In my humble opinion i think they are near identical. (saying this i am not at the mastering studio today but have done this in my DT880 pro headphones).
I also tested against nebular Manley passive EQ (mammoth) which is an extremely well rated EQ and the Nebula Pultec programs (which are regarded as superior to most 'normal vst' eqs) . Again, I feel i was able to match the sound completely using EQ5 with minimal effort.
Here are some examples:
pultec low boost (pink noise) : https://audiofreaks.box.com/s/eoj3jv2t0ks7at1srd2i
pultec low boost (same settings on a music loop) : https://audiofreaks.box.com/s/3ybv427hu3k4jq8oqjnv
[on these examples the first half of the audio is Nebular the second is EQ5]
Finally i did some tests comparing the Waves SSL-E Compressor with the Bitwig DYNAMICS device... and again i was able to get the sound virtually identical pretty quickly.
Overall i would have no issue at all using these 2 internal devices in professional mixing jobs.
Cheers
Dale
ps. i realise this wasn't a super deep scientific test... there are lots of aspects I haven't tested such as pre-ringing , how it reacts dynamically and all that ... maybe i'll get deeper when i have more time. this was literally for my own curiosity of whether i could get any where close to matching the sound of these respected plugins and felt it was worth sharing.
