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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: .. Limiting is a form of compression since it removes excursions in excess of the level that would produce 100% modulation (or 100% negative peaks on AM). Not really. Limiting is a hard stop that is not ever passed. Compression is an algorithm applied to the program material that attempts to prevent reaching that max limit but it could go over limit in extreme circumstances. That's the definition that fit 30 years ago. Today, audio processers like the Optimod and the Omnia employ delay to look ahead at the audio, then, with advance knowledge, know when to reduce gain to prevent the need to peak limit by hard clipping. So what we have is a merging of the concept of compression and peak limiting. It's all achieved by looking ahead to know how to process the audio that then heads to the transmitter. It's what works. I don't think so. Maybe that's why I can't listen to most FM stations as you helped pervert the sound. There are about 30,000 stations in the Western Hemisphere. I can't see how one person's adjustments can influence all of them. The real truth is that stations have realized that a sound that is loud, level and specttrally balanced wins if the programming is right. Today's radio sounds infinitely better than it did 30 or 40 years ago. |
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