Difference between revisions of "Limiter"
(First ed - Limiter not Compressor) |
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[http://bose.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/4806048934/m/266109409?r=753107029#753107029 Original Post] | [http://bose.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/4806048934/m/266109409?r=753107029#753107029 Original Post] | ||
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| + | Julio-at-Bose | ||
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| + | ;Model II limiter | ||
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| + | :The limiters threshold is from -50.0dB to 0dB. A limiter is a type of compressor to limit the level of a signal to a certain threshold. A limiter will almost completely prevent any additional gain above the threshold. Limiters are used against signal peaking (clipping). They prevent occasional signal peaks which would be too loud or distorted. | ||
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| + | [http://bose.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/76010377/m/2180022266?r=2030042266#2030042266 Original Post] | ||
Revision as of 10:20, 5 April 2013
On the Bose® Pro Portable PA Community you will read about "compression" when the L1™ is operating at high volume.
Hilmar-at-Bose tells us:
- There is no actual compressor. The only dynamic processing is a protective limiter. That should only kick in, when you are hitting it real hard.
- This limiter is not per-se frequency dependent, but there are independent ones for the L1 and B1 and they are tuned a little different.
Julio-at-Bose
- Model II limiter
- The limiters threshold is from -50.0dB to 0dB. A limiter is a type of compressor to limit the level of a signal to a certain threshold. A limiter will almost completely prevent any additional gain above the threshold. Limiters are used against signal peaking (clipping). They prevent occasional signal peaks which would be too loud or distorted.