Originally posted by Heldenleben
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Dynamic Range Compression/Fader Fiddling on iPlayer/Sounds
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI was taking 0dB as the saturation point where clipping kicks in with digital audio and distortion increases sharply with analogue. If you use something like get_iPlayer to capture the HD Sound stream you will find the peak level generally tends to top out approaching -6dB. I was not referring to balanced versus unbalanced analogue (+4dB versus -10dB).
There’s also a really interesting technical brief in sound mixing for telly...
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostYou might find this interesting. Looks like dB’s are going the way of handloom weaving ..
There’s also a really interesting technical brief in sound mixing for telly...
A notable exception to the above is Radio 3 digital. This has no dynamics processing applied to its output. To remove the possibility of clipping, a protection limiter prevents peaks exceeding -2dBFS from reaching the inputs to the emission encoders. Whilst this 2dB headroom is less than on our other services, the nature of Radio 3’s output is such that the average peak level is significantly lower.The extended working range is only used to accommodate exceptional transients such as those on musical crescendos during live concerts.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostYep it also means that when I listen on digital I am forever adjusting the volume control on my amp ...which is why , despite its other flaws , I prefer FM...
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostYep it also means that when I listen on digital I am forever adjusting the volume control on my amp ...which is why , despite its other flaws , I prefer FM...
I went a long way with FM - finally an 8-element Triax aerial, latterly 7.5 after a gale loosened and a Magpie pinched. So quieting was always achieved, even off a briefly owned Leak Troughline/Valve Decoder which needed 4 mV! I still use the Magnum Dynalab for Radio 4 (or for comparisons....).
During the 2005 and 2006 Proms with the lovely Magnum in place, compression became so prevalent on the live relays I found myself turning pps down and ffs up..... a reluctant human decompressor.
This, during a performance of Turangalila.... well that couldn't go on could it? Having already abandoned DAB (the Arcam Alpha 10 ended up in Mum's bedroom - she couldn't hear the HF distortion...), I gave up on Radio 3 Concerts after that until the 192 kbps aac stream began in 2009. I read about it in the tech section of the Guardian, then rushed into town the same day to buy a Cambridge DacMagic from Richer Sounds, and by midnight was experiencing le grand rapprochement, swooning to a performance of Stravinsky's Orpheus off iplayer, with the BBCSSO and Volkov....
My beloved Proms were back! I was starry-eyed for days.....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 22-02-20, 15:52.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostYep it also means that when I listen on digital I am forever adjusting the volume control on my amp ...which is why , despite its other flaws , I prefer FM...Last edited by johnb; 22-02-20, 16:13.
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As far as FM vs DAB vs iPlayer/Sounds is concerned I gave up on FM (Sugden, Meridian, Magnum tuners) almost a decade ago because I found the compression very frustrating indeed. If I set the volume for the quiet passages the climaxes were weak and anemic, and if I set the volume for the climaxes the soft passages boomed out. Not only that but Optimod really mangles the relative dynamics. So, with all its drawbacks I preferred listening to DAB (at 192 kbps true stereo). Of course the 320kbps iPlayer/Sounds stream knocks the socks off both FM and DAB/Freeview.
Out of curiosity I've compared the Prokofiev 5 from the 320 kbps Listen Again stream with both the 1985 Neeme Jarvi recording and the more recent Jansons/RCO live. (I know, I know - it's just displacement activity to avoid working on the house.)
The R3 Prokofiev stacks up pretty well, all things considered (though some of the Jansons' quiet passages are somewhat softer).
Code:R3 Jarvi Jansons 1st mvmt overall -22 dB -20 dB -23 dB (RMS) 3rd mvmt overall -26 dB -24 dB -27 dB (RMS) 3rd mvmt quiet bit: 3 secs before 1st clar' entry -37 dB -40 dB -47 dB (RMS) 3rd mvmt quiet bit: 3 secs after 1st clar' entry -38 dB -41 dB -40 dB (RMS)
(With the 1st and 3rd movement "overall" figures - the larger the negative, the more it indicates a wider dynamic range.)Last edited by johnb; 22-02-20, 19:46.
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Originally posted by johnb View PostOut of curiosity - how do you cope with CDs? (The dynamic range of CDs is at least as wide as iPlayer/Sounds and can be significantly wider.)
I also prefer live performances to recordings - a very large percentage of CDs I’ve bought I’ve only played a few times. I just like the idea that anything can happen...and to answer your question I am also doing a lot of overriding when I listen to CD’s ..
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Just discovered and joined this forum. Hello. Great to know that others care about their music dynamics, too! There are difficult choices, having seen that vivid comparison trace by johnb between FM and other. I do prefer the FM texture to grainy DAB, but share others' frustration with FM's squashed peaks. Working range was about 20 dB on the Bruch concerto with BBC Phil today: same spec as 1950's AM!
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Originally posted by Another Howard View PostJust discovered and joined this forum. Hello. Great to know that others care about their music dynamics, too! There are difficult choices, having seen that vivid comparison trace by johnb between FM and other. I do prefer the FM texture to grainy DAB, but share others' frustration with FM's squashed peaks. Working range was about 20 dB on the Bruch concerto with BBC Phil today: same spec as 1950's AM!
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Originally posted by Another Howard View PostJust discovered and joined this forum. Hello. Great to know that others care about their music dynamics, too! There are difficult choices, having seen that vivid comparison trace by johnb between FM and other. I do prefer the FM texture to grainy DAB, but share others' frustration with FM's squashed peaks. Working range was about 20 dB on the Bruch concerto with BBC Phil today: same spec as 1950's AM!
No obvious FM reception problems today with the lunchtime concert or the current Liszt relay..... but there's a rather important football match on soon so I can't listen extensively to offer a subjective DR view....
(7.5 element Triax aerial aimed at Holme Moss (60km distant). It was an 8-element but Magpies removed a gale-weakened part of it)...
I used to communicate regularly with BBC Engineering about this in the 1990s. One producer, mistakenly thinking I expected CD-style dbs from FM (I didn't even own a player) told me sternly that the max DR on FM was 30db. Around the same time, Reg Williamson in the HIFiNews showed that it could have a workable DR of 50db+.....
But thanks to auto-Optimod, it must be a few years since that was ever possible, yet alone approached. Shame because, at least with a large aluminium sculpture on the roof, FM always had great potential and a wonderful design tradition especially in Japan, UK and USA.......Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 01-12-21, 19:51.
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