Lysander
Rock Star
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- 3,267
WTF is a LUFS
"Loudness Units Full Scale". It's a measurement of the perceived overall loudness of an audio signal.
WTF is a LUFS
My latency is real short under my wife’s f’n sound.LATNECY UNDER FRICKIN' SOUND
tl;dr LUFS on null deltas is a very flawed way to compare profilers.
Yes. Null tests are one tool, but they're a really poor indicator of how "good" a profile, capture, etc. is. They can only tell you one thing - if the two signals are identical. If they're not identical, they don't give a real useful measure of how different they are or, more importantly, how that score correlates to a difference in the sound. I can easily take a source file and process it in two different and reasonable ways. One will give a much better null test score, but will sound much further from the source material than the one with a "worse" null score.The biggest issue with a null test is it only tells you how the modelers do with the VERY specific input used in the test. Leo's inputs are not at all representative of the complete range of frequencies, levels, attacks and dynamics etc that a guitar, guitarist and effects chain can produce.
So, you basically get a single number that represents a poorly weighted average of a few tiny microscopic bits of the whole picture. Completely useless, but I guess it seems scientific and it's a lot easier to digest a simple number than something more representative of the complex truth.
Just touch it.How do you tell what commands are assigned to a switch? I see the label of multiple but nowhere I can see on hardware or editor shows the actual assigned items.
I'm still having mini nightmares about that latency thread...... aCk!!!You guys tempted me against my better judgement to go look at that thread. Having a Stadium and having played it and, albeit a sign of perhaps too high an opinion of my opinion, have determined that for my needs it's an upgrade more/less across the board, meaning I had no interest in measured latency, so I'd ignored it. It was every bit the tilt at a windmill I expected. I suppose latency might matter for someone whose needs dictate attaching a bunch of stuff via the loops, but I don't think whatever tiny latency reduction some random dude expects based on principle is going to be the difference maker very often. For my own sanity, whenever someone's argument stands on nothing but "in principle", it's not worth pursuing. Any other view on the matter will get brushed off, "But, in principle..." no matter how relevant or sensible it is.
My latency is real short under my wife’s f’n sound.![]()
My latency is real short under my wife’s f’n sound.![]()
Yes. Null tests are one tool, but they're a really poor indicator of how "good" a profile, capture, etc. is. They can only tell you one thing - if the two signals are identical. If they're not identical, they don't give a real useful measure of how different they are or, more importantly, how that score correlates to a difference in the sound. I can easily take a source file and process it in two different and reasonable ways. One will give a much better null test score, but will sound much further from the source material than the one with a "worse" null score.
I'm not allowed to be part of that speculation, so I'll back out of this one.
Can't stand hearing him talk-e.If I have to listen to Leo Gibson for more than 2 or 3 minutes, my brain shuts down and reboots in about 1 minute and 3 seconds......
Where did you get this image?
I guess it was on a Rhett video where he had them blurred out? Idk I got it from TGP so take that as you willWhere did you get this image?
If I had to guess I’d say the white one to the right if the 2203 is almost certainly a Jubilee. The amp to the left of the AC30 could possibly be a Super Reverb or perhaps a tweed or brown Princeton or deluxe.
I’m not sure about the third amp.
If I have to listen to Leo Gibson for more than 2 or 3 minutes, my brain shuts down and reboots in about 1 minute and 3 seconds......