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Compressors (and limiters) are devices that reduce the dynamic
range of the signal.
(see the Q&As re dynamic range
and dBs)
This is useful when the dynamic range is greater than the dynamic
range of the sound system, or where you need to control the dynamic
range of an instrument or vocalist so that it 'sits' better (i.e.
can always be heard) in a mix. Compression is nearly always applied
to pop and rock vocalists.
What actually happens is that you set a threshold above
which compression occurs, and then set a compression ratio.
The higher the ratio, the more the compression. The ratio expresses
how much the output signal will increase for a given increase
in the input.
Look at this graph -

If the threshold is set at +14dBm as here, and the compression
ratio is 10:1, then if the input level increases by 10dBm, the
output level will only increase by 1dBm. If the ratio is set
to 1:1, there will be no compression as each 1dB increase in
input gives 1dB increase at the output.
Some compressors use a system called 'soft-knee' compression,
where the full compression ratio set is only applied when the
signal exceeds the threshold by a considerable amount. Between
the threshold level and this level the amount of compression
applied is gradually increased. This gives a more natural sound
and a certain amount of dynamics are preserved. next page |