|
| quote: | Originally posted by camsr
Only problem with MSED is it doesn't kill either center or side, it just lowers or raises them by -+12dB. So using that won't give you complete seperation. |
That isn't how it works. An M/S converter converts stereo to mid/side and back - that is, it takes the mid and puts it in the left channel, and puts the side in the right channel. That way you can process M/S the same way you process L/R, and when you're done, you slap on another M/S converter to change the M/S back to L/R (stereo).
MSED also has the weird "inline mode" which essentially does the conversion, applies different gains to the L and R channels, and converts it back, all in one step. I guess this might be useful for specific purposes? Anyway, that's not the only way that MSED can be used and it's definitely not how M/S converters are typically used.
___________________
My party schedule:
2009-02-21 - DJ Attention @ I'm So Popular
2009-06-18 - DJ Annoying @ People Need To Know Where I'll Be
2012-11-32 - DJ Insufferable ɸ Or At Least the Stalkers I Complain About
2048-06-66 - Spastic & Whocares ¶ Although I'm Actually Flattered
9999-45-81 - Tweaker Gimp ☼ I Probably Won't Even Go To This But I Have To Make Sure I Fill Up All The Available Space Here
|