Home | Current Issue | Reviews | Mix Forums | Subscribe Now | Online Extras













blank



Special Report: AES Paris
2006 NAB Show
2006 Winter NAMM
AES New Products Guide
NAB Audio Products 2005
Education Directory
2005 Summer NAMM


MixLine
MixLine Live
eDeals
Sign Up Now
MixLine Archive
MixLine Live Archive
Special Reports


Dare to Dream Contest
Barbershop Studio Blog
eClassifieds
TEC Awards
TEC20
Studio Showcase
Seminars on Demand
NAPRS
AES
NAMM
NAB


Headline News
Site Index
About Mix
Contact Us
Advertising Information
Subscribe Now
Customer Service


Broadcast Engineering
Broadway Sound Master Class
Electronic Musician
Live Design
millimeter
Mix
Onstage
Radio magazine
Remix
Sound & Video Contractor
Video Systems
Penton Media Inc.

blank






Q/A Archives

October 2006

M T W T F S S
« Sep    
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  

Sign-up for RSS

Sign-up for RSS

Rupert Neve Designs

Innovations In Analog

sponsored by Rupert Neve Designs


Archive for October 12th, 2006

plug-ins vs actual devices
Posted by Joey from Phoenix, AZ, US on October 12, 2006

What do you think of the sound of the plugins that model the classic devices you designed and what are they missing?

What are they missing? Transformers, transistors, electricity…ok, I
jest, but the concern I have is the software designer must decide how
much of the hardware will be simulated. There are many complicated and
interrelated things going on in an analog circuit like intermodulation
distortion, harmonic distortion, slew rate distortion, crossover
distortion, noise, etc. These specs are derived by and or limited by
component selection. Different products sound different because of these
specs and design elements, otherwise you wouldn't own so many different
brands, right? Let's put a squarewave at 10 kHz, +20 dBu through that
plugin. What is the 2nd harmonic content? 3rd harmonic? Depending on
your digital sample rate, you can stop programming now. Really, it is
not even fair to compare plug in manufactures to their analog
counterparts because they are totally different products, designed for
different applications and must be evaluated accordingly. What do YOU
think of the sound? Personally I like hardware. It is like the
difference between a gold coin and a check, they may be worth the same,
but I could only sell one on eBay!
-Kevin


1


 
Back to Top

blank
© 2009 Penton Business Media Inc. About Us | Contact Us | Advertising | For Search Partners | Terms of Use | Privacy Statement
blank