| Aphex 722 Dominator II Precision Peak Limiter Details The Aphex Systems Model 720 / 722 Dominator II is a stereo MultiBand
peak limiter designed to fit a wide range of applications. Through the
use of MultiBand techniques along with new proprietary circuits, the
audibility of limiting action has been greatly reduced, especially when
compared to conventional limiters. This means that greater limiting
depth is possible, resulting in higher loudness with maintained audio
quality. At virtually any limiting depth, the Dominator II is free of
"hole punching", "dullness", and most other effects normally associated
with limiters. As a peak overshoot protection limiter, the Dominator II
is undetectable in line while it absolutely prevents peak levels from
exceeding a user settable output level. In addition, the desired
limiting effects of greater audio density and increased "punch are
readily available with the Dominator II.The Model 722, for broadcast
use, has the Pre and De-emphasis circuitry, while the Model 720 Does
not. Multiband vs Wideband Processing A very
significant problem with wideband processing is "spectral gain
intermodulation" which occurs when one part of the spectrum controls
the level of another part. A typical situation is a vocalist being
"sucked down" every time the kick drum hits. Since most energy is
contained in the lower frequencies, they tend to control the level of
the entire spectrum. When the lower frequencies are above the limit
threshold the higher frequencies are attenuated thus causing the output
to be dull. MultiBand processing solves these problems by
splitting the audio into two or more frequency bands and processing
each band separately. However, more bands often result in many more
parameters to control including a method of summing the bands together
again. While giving the user flexibility, it also requires different
settings for almost every different source. The Dominator II uses
program dependent, intelligent circuits to reduce the number of
controls. The user, therefore, has flexibility to shape the sound while
quickly and easily achieving the goal of consistent, effective limiting. ALT (Automatic Limit Threshold) A
MultiBand processor splits the audio into separate bands, limits each
band individually and then sums the bands together again. Even though
each band's peak output is predictable, summing the bands together
produces an unpredictable peak output. One conventional approach
to making the summed output predictable is to use a wideband limiter
after the summing. This, however, introduces all the drawbacks of
wideband limiting discussed above. Another approach is to use a
clipper on the summed output. This causes too much clipping distortion
if the summed output is too high. In order to avoid this distortion the
limiters' thresholds are set very far below the clipper threshold. The
drawback is a loss of loudness and, due to the lower thresholds, much
greater amount of processing. The Dominator II uses a patented
method to produce a predictable peak output while maintaining maximum
loudness without audible distortion- the Automatic Limit Threshold
(ALT). The outputs of the three bands are summed and sent to the ALT
detector circuit. If the sum exceeds a reference value, the ALT reduces
the thresholds of the individual limiters. When the summed output falls
below the reference value the limit thresholds return to their original
setting. The ALT circuit has a self-adjusting finite attack time.
The amount of time it takes to lower the thresholds of the limiters is
the length of time the limiters' overshoot may be in the clipper. The
reference value of the ALT in relation to the clipper determines the
depth of clipping. Both parameters are set by the Density
control. When the Density control is set higher, the ALT reference gets
closer to clipping, and the attack time is slower, producing more
clipping. The opposite occurs when Density is set lower. The "0 RCH"
position for the Density control emulates the standard parameters of
the original Studio Dominator Model 700, and is recommended for general
use. It should be noted that there is only one ALT circuit
controlling both channels equally. This provides global stereo balance
and imaging by assuring that both channels always limit at the same
threshold. This does cause an interaction if the Dominator II is used
as two independent channels. Therefore, we do not recommend such a
practice. Aphex 722 Dominator II Precision Peak Limiter Features - Peak Ceiling Trimmable in 0.2dB Steps Over a 34dB Range
- 3 Bands of Limiting with Switchable Crossover Frequencies
- Patented Automatic Limit Threshold (ALT) Circuitry
- Freedom from Pumping
- Freedom from Spectral Gain Intermodulation
- Adjustable Density (Relative Crest Height)
- Calibrated Detented Potentiometers
- 104dB Dynamic Range
- LF and HF EQ Provides Shaping Equalization Below Peak Ceiling
- Relay Bypass, Remote Controllable
- Servo-Balanced Transformerless Inputs and Outputs
Aphex 722 Dominator II Precision Peak Limiter Applications - Sound
Contracting -- protection of amplifiers and speakers from overload;
increased loudness; maximized use of available power.
- Recording -- preventing sudden peak overload of mixer or recorder; tightening tracks; special effects, etc.
- Mixing
-- used as a program limiter, the Dominator II will keep a track "rock
steady" for "layering" into or on top of a mix.
- Digital Sampling -- obtaining good full scale samples free from peak overload, i.e. no more missed samples.
- Digital
Recording -- insuring clean recording by stopping clipping of peaks and
overshoots. Maximizes bit usage for less distortion.
- Satellite
Uplink -- Modulation control to prevent splattering on high frequency
audio, gives reduced distortion, better signal-to- noise.
- Broadcasting
-- AM and FM modulation control for increased loudness; cleaner sound;
use in production for greater consistency of tapes, punchier
voice-overs.
- Location Film Shoots -- anti-crash for dialog and sound effects recording.
- Post Production -- Soundtrack peak control; managing difficult dialog; controlling transient sound effects.
- Optical
Recording and Transfer -- prevents "valve clash", gives higher average
level with low distortion and better signal-to- noise performance.
- Analog
Disk Mastering -- peak control for high allowable average cutting
levels; less limiter degradation to the program; brighter, punchier
sound.
- C/D Mastering -- peak and density control for more
accurate digitizing, cleaner sound requiring less error correction on
playback; no limiter induced sound degradation.
- STL & Phone Line Driver -- maximize signal-to-noise without overload distortion.
- Video and Audio Tape Duplication -- "Hotter" transfers withoutsaturation.
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