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| quote: | Originally posted by derail
I think people should separate out "technical clipping" from "audible clipping".
Yes, if you go over 0 dB on a channel and the clip light goes on, then technically yes, it's clipping.
All that really matters though, is if at the end of the process the audio quality of the song has been affected - have any waveforms (of individual sounds or of the overall mix) been squared off?
Depending how much headroom a DAW has, the waveforms won't start clipping/squaring off at 0dB.
I don't know why you'd set things up this way in any case - if you set Ableton's level to 0 you know there shouldn't be any clipping issues, and then you just turn the output up on your speakers. It seems pointless to risk running into a DAW's ceiling. |
I do it that way because its hard to get the levels right otherwise. Theres more resolution on the meter the higher you go. So running it around 0 dB allows me to see where the levels are more clearly and keep them more consistent.
What I want to know is where does this squaring off of the waveforms occur?
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