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September 08, 2010, 02:44:41 *
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Author Topic: Vent normalization  (Read 258 times)
Arrin
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« on: March 09, 2010, 10:39:11 »

Here's something I picked up from a friend. I myself found it very useful, I hope you guys do too. (Might even be "sticky" material who knows  Wink )

Open Vent, go to Setup

- Enable Direct Sound

- Select the SFX Button

- Select Compressor and click Add.

- Under Compressor Properties use the following settings

- Gain = Adjust for how loud you want people to be. (~ 15)

- Attack = 0.01

- Release = ~ 500

- Threshold = ~  -30

- Ratio = 100

- Pre delay = 4.0


What do the settings do:
Gain How much volume you feed into the compressor. Not really relevant unless everyone is too quiet, then you can turn this up a little; turning it up too much will sound EXTREMELY *%*%ty.
Attack How fast volume change will happen. example: setting this to 500 means that any-
thing coming in will only be dropped in volume after a half a second. for vent this should
be set as low as possible.
Release how fast the compressor stops changing things. not really that relevant with vent, setting it around 500 is good for voice material.
Threshold This sets the point where we actually start changing what?s coming in. Whereas 0 is the absolute loudest you can have for an input, -60 is super quiet. Average users will probably come in somewhere around -25 to -15, with the occaisional few being really quiet, which is why I have this set so low.
Ratio How much any sound below the set threshold gets compressed and/or modified in the volume department.
If you still want to hear SOME volume variation then set this lower (2-4)... the higher you set it the closer in volume everyone will be.
Pre delay Mostly just deals with processing; with computer and digital processors they can look ahead a few milliseconds to see what needs to be dropped in volume or changed before it actually comes through the speakers. Highest is ideal.


 Roll Eyes

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