Young man, I have been working in the broadcast industry for 40 years, and that is the best, and clearest explanation of digital metering I have ever seen. Outstanding! Thank you for this.
This was so simply and beautifully explained. Thank you so much. I've read and watched so many resources to understand this, but I could never completely grasp the subject until now. Thanks a ton, again.
Been pulling my hair out for 2 weeks trying to get my gain staging down between all the different meters, along with the K system. This was a huge help. Thank you man. 🙏
WOWWWWWWWW!!!! What an amazingly explained video on digital & analogue metering. I’ve been looking for a video like this for ever, hanks for doing it:).
UA-cam Needs More TRUE Instructor like you , Very Well explained . Thankyou Brother can you Make a video on use of LUFS In DAW in Briefly . Thanks in advance
4:18 metering for digital vs analog recording. Soft tape clipping vs hard digital clipping. 5:38 analog VU meter vs digital dBu meter 7:07 caveat: even in DAW, metering might actually be analog
that was awesome......very well presented i just had one quick question and instead got a super in depth explanation with standards history to boot subscribed fsure
Hi, beautiful explanation. I didn't understand the last thing: why, if you put higher treeshold, true pick doesn't clipping? Higher treeshold -> less compression -> more clipping, where is the mistake?
Great video! thanks a lot.- i have an tv program audio that they told me that the show has to be between -10dbfs and -20dbfs. wich plugin could help to measure and be sure that I'm in that level.- thanks!
Unfortunately, no. Let me explain. SPL stands for sound pressure level and is the relation of physical pressure in a location. The reference for SPL is 0dB SPL is the quietest sound the human ear can detect. dBFS is a relation to the maximum digital level before clipping so 0dBFS is the highest level and the rest of the values are negative. The big problem here is that dependent on the size of your speakers, size of amplifier, output volume of your interface and distance from the speakers all change the potential SPL. Note that these aren't even all the factors, even temperature and the materials on the walls make a difference to SPL. Therefore there is no way to accurately convert them without knowing a lot more about the rest of the system at which point it is much easier to just measure it with an SPL meter.
what is the difference between VU & RMS metering? some mix engineers i see use VU, others use RMS, so why one over the other, if they both show average level?
On the first dbu diagram you showed, it had +12 above +16 .. that's surely just a mistake right? I've not been doing it wrong for all these years have I? xD
From what I can hear, anywhere near 0dbfs you are asking for distortion. You must consider your converters also. And I hate to point out that +12 dbu would normally appear before +16dbu on a real meter! :-)
In regards to the +12 thing, It's meant to be +6 but it's just a typo in the slide, but you already know that right. In regards to distortion, Obviously, the circumstances matter here. If you are talking about purely one channel as long as you are under 0dBFS you should get ZERO distortion (if everything is set up properly and functioning correctly). If you are talking about the gain staging of an entire mix, running the levels on individual channels anywhere close to zero is asking for trouble. This video is just about individual metering and not gain staging though.
Young man, I have been working in the broadcast industry for 40 years, and that is the best, and clearest explanation of digital metering I have ever seen. Outstanding! Thank you for this.
Likes and subscribe is not enough for this wealth of free knowledge!
Clearly explained, and easily understood.Thank you!
This was so simply and beautifully explained. Thank you so much. I've read and watched so many resources to understand this, but I could never completely grasp the subject until now. Thanks a ton, again.
The art of teaching :) Thanks for the gift of your knowledge, and for being well-prepared and explaining this so clearly and practically.
As a master's student in audio....you are the best, my friend. Many thanks for this vid 🙏
My pleasure 😊
Thank you! Ive neaver been able to find time to learn this properly. You are making the world a wiser place! Cheers!
most precious video on the net so far Thank you
3 full pages of notes. Exactly what I needed! Thanks
Appreciate it so much sir😌🙏
Been pulling my hair out for 2 weeks trying to get my gain staging down between all the different meters, along with the K system. This was a huge help. Thank you man. 🙏
Was a pleasure to follow this, thanks a lot :)
Excellent video, presentation and the way you explain them. Thank you very much!!!
Utterly brilliant presentation!
This is an excellent video. Instant subscribe
very well done - organized - efficient - articulate - fine production values
Really great video!! I'll watch this multiple times for sure.
Sir, Thank you so much! This subject was a mystery to me for soooo long! Thank you!!
Quick and thorough explaination. thank you! 😎👍
WOWWWWWWWW!!!! What an amazingly explained video on digital & analogue metering. I’ve been looking for a video like this for ever, hanks for doing it:).
Can't say I understood all of that but I will use this video as a reference. It did answer my initial question and much more. Thanks
Thank you for putting this together - a very well explained and comprehensive overview.
thanks for putting this together. hugely informative
This is just what I was searching for! Thanks a lot! Please make more videos like this!
Glad you enjoyed it. I am open to suggestions.
You're so clear and coherent, you truly deserve more followers!
I Sub immediately after finding this video!
Thanks, that is appreciated!!
You are a wonderful teacher. This is exactly the information I was searching for. Thank you 🙏
Such a well explained video, thank you so much!
UA-cam Needs More TRUE Instructor like you , Very Well explained . Thankyou Brother
can you Make a video on use of LUFS In DAW in Briefly . Thanks in advance
Thank you !
Very very good! Thanks!
In loss of words!
Thank you!!!
Perfect video, so clearly explained. Thank you so much:D
Thanks for watching :)
Excellent, thanks for explaining these cryptic concepts!
Brilliantly explained 💥
4:18 metering for digital vs analog recording. Soft tape clipping vs hard digital clipping. 5:38 analog VU meter vs digital dBu meter 7:07 caveat: even in DAW, metering might actually be analog
that was awesome......very well presented
i just had one quick question and instead got a super in depth explanation with standards history to boot
subscribed fsure
Best video to this themes! Congratulations!
Thank you!
Great video. Very well explained.
Thank you, much appreciated.
Excellent and thorough overview!
Thanks Stefan!
Thank you, really so well put together!
Thank you!
Hi, beautiful explanation. I didn't understand the last thing: why, if you put higher treeshold, true pick doesn't clipping?
Higher treeshold -> less compression -> more clipping, where is the mistake?
Excellent video.
This was awesome!
Great explanation. Thank you!
This was extremely helpful. Thank you so much.
Great vid 🎉
Just what I needed, thanks!
Thanks!
Great video! thanks a lot.- i have an tv program audio that they told me that the show has to be between -10dbfs and -20dbfs. wich plugin could help to measure and be sure that I'm in that level.- thanks!
Thanks a lot.. Perfect Video
Can I convert a dBfs to dBSPL??
Unfortunately, no. Let me explain.
SPL stands for sound pressure level and is the relation of physical pressure in a location. The reference for SPL is 0dB SPL is the quietest sound the human ear can detect.
dBFS is a relation to the maximum digital level before clipping so 0dBFS is the highest level and the rest of the values are negative.
The big problem here is that dependent on the size of your speakers, size of amplifier, output volume of your interface and distance from the speakers all change the potential SPL. Note that these aren't even all the factors, even temperature and the materials on the walls make a difference to SPL. Therefore there is no way to accurately convert them without knowing a lot more about the rest of the system at which point it is much easier to just measure it with an SPL meter.
Very good video
So how do I utilize all this information while producing and mixing?
How is it that on the dBu meter it goes from +4 to +16 to +12.
Great vid btw, I'm learning a ton.
Just a typo :)
Beautifully explained 😀
Glad it was helpful!
what is the difference between VU & RMS metering? some mix engineers i see use VU, others use RMS, so why one over the other, if they both show average level?
All I can say is Thank You !
On the first dbu diagram you showed, it had +12 above +16 .. that's surely just a mistake right? I've not been doing it wrong for all these years have I? xD
Very usefull. Thank you.
Thx!🎉
What song is he using
Very helpful... ok... thank you so much... ok...
thank u man !
Thank you :)
From what I can hear, anywhere near 0dbfs you are asking for distortion. You must consider your converters also.
And I hate to point out that +12 dbu would normally appear before +16dbu on a real meter! :-)
In regards to the +12 thing, It's meant to be +6 but it's just a typo in the slide, but you already know that right.
In regards to distortion, Obviously, the circumstances matter here. If you are talking about purely one channel as long as you are under 0dBFS you should get ZERO distortion (if everything is set up properly and functioning correctly).
If you are talking about the gain staging of an entire mix, running the levels on individual channels anywhere close to zero is asking for trouble. This video is just about individual metering and not gain staging though.
@@audioproductiontips Yes I did know it was a typo. Pete, please see my comment on Top Down Mixing video!!
Finally somebody who is not talking out of their a$# 😁
Dude...awesome fucking video
That intro was loud