![]() In short - you're probably working with your levels a little too loud, and noise bursts are particularly loud and dangerous to the ear, compared to music, at any given level. You'll very likely find that, unless you're writing slamming electro music, the level of your music is pretty low, particularly if you're leaving a good amount of headroom when working. ![]() Now stop the noise and play your cubase music. With your monitors/headphones set very very low - turn the level of that noise up towards 0db (it defaults to -12 when you open the plug in I believe). The No.1 Website for Pro Audio The No.1 Website for Pro Audio. You can easily mimic it by creating an audio track in CB, adding the "TestGenerator" and selecting white noise. Ice9 Automute Ice9 Automute’s soft-muting function will begin to attenuate the gain before a single sample over the threshold has passed. In the meantime, you could use the free Ice9 to prevent extreme jumps in volume levels: Ice9 Automute :: cerberus audio You literrally read in my mind. However, the sort of noise you're trying to protect against is not transient in nature, but prolonged. Loud things in music tend to be very brief, the transient hit of a drum for example. you should be working with some headroom, such that your music, in it's loudest sections still has a level of several db lower than zero - in my case, mixes in cubase peak at around -12, although you might get different advice from different people on that. Yes latency increases by approx 1ms - I just googled it and that latency info is on the steinberg website.Ī very quick explanation - you'll have to search around the forum to learn more. To answer your questions about the limiter (as separate from the above info) - yes signal under the threshold remains intact / un-affected. Jbridge has proved very useful in allowing me to keep a couple of other old vst plugins too.Īlternatively Nugen's "sig mod" product has a module that does the same thing. you would still need to spend a small amount of money on (the incredibly useful) jbridge to create a 64bit compatible. Annoyingly I think it's 32bit only so won't work if you're using more recent versions of cubase, unless you jbridge it. If you search for "Ice9 vst" there's a free plug-in that will do it well. That's because, depending upon how loud you're working, the solution above will have some usefulness - but could still end up with you hearing a very loud, prolonged sound. To protect against loud sounds you ideally should have something that will quickly cut the sound dead above a threshold.
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