Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position. (dw)

2013-09-24 Thread Andrew Levine
See Bob Katz' K-20:

   http://www.digido.com/how-to-make-better-recordings-part-2.html

Regards,

Andrew Levine
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Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position.

2013-09-24 Thread Andy Furniss

Aaron Heller wrote:

On Mon, Sep 23, 2013 at 3:55 PM, Andy Furniss adf.li...@gmail.com wrote:






I don't quite understand the in phase though, are you saying that they
artificially adjust phase for the same sound that comes out of more than
one speaker to affect the mixdown?



The Recording Academy recommendations for surround sound say (sec 4.3)

One potential problem that can arise from routing a signal into two or more
speakers is the danger of increased, and increasingly complex, comb
filtering. This problem multiplies as more speakers are engaged and can
become critical if downmixing is ever employed by the playback system.
Therefore, many experienced surround mixers selectively turn off channels
when bringing a sound inside the surround bubble or when dynamically
panning a sound from one area in the surround space to another.

It is recommended that whenever signal is placed into three, four, or five
speakers, it be decorrelated.



http://www2.grammy.com/PDFs/Recording_Academy/Producers_And_Engineers/SurroundRecommendations.pdf


Ahh, thanks for that.

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Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position. (dw)

2013-09-24 Thread Andy Furniss

Andrew Levine wrote:

See Bob Katz' K-20:

http://www.digido.com/how-to-make-better-recordings-part-2.html


Thanks for the link, looks interesting, though I haven't had time to 
read properly yet.


Accepting the above may give insight into my query, just to be clear I 
am not a producer in any way - just thinking about reproduction of 
others work whether that is good, bad or inbetween.


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Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position. (dw)

2013-09-23 Thread Ken Landers
While -16.9 might keep you safe, a better option might be -20 dBFS.  Gives some 
headroom in case you need it.  Also, many consumer playback devices may not 
handle full scale output.

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   1. Re: Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening
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 Message: 1
 Date: Sun, 22 Sep 2013 19:53:35 +0100
 From: dw d...@dwareing.plus.com
 To: Surround Sound discussion group sursound@music.vt.edu
 Subject: Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at
listening position.
 Message-ID: 523f3caf.4040...@dwareing.plus.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
 
 On 22/09/2013 12:51, Andy Furniss wrote:
 Hi
 
 I do not have a 7.1 sound system so can't actually test this, also as 
 may become apparent I don't know much about sound :-)
 
 I would be grateful if someone could correct/confirm the following.
 
 If I were to mix down a digital 7ch to mono I have to reduce by 1/7 
 amplitude to prevent clipping, so one channel will be -16.9dBfs.
 This assumes that all 7 channels are driven with the same maximum level, 
 in phase, and that this would get past the mastering stage,,
 I'm sure they bear in mind the possibility of stereo, or mono mixdown.
 
 If I play the track over one speaker the volume difference between one 
 and all channels will be 16.9dB.
 
 If I were to measure the volume at listening position (assuming 
 anechoic and equal speaker distance) with a real 7 speaker setup then 
 the volume difference, because the speakers are not close, would add 
 up using power not amplitude so the difference heard/measured between 
 1 and 7 at full power would only be 8.45dB, so there is quite a large 
 dynamic range discrepency?
 
 You would add powers if the 7 channels had random relative phase (which 
 is less likely with anechoic and equal speaker distance
 
 
 The real reason for this question is more to do with simulation than 
 real life, so perhaps that will make a difference - if the speakers 
 are infinitely far producing planewaves and a soundfield is at 
 listening position would that change anything for what levels the 
 virtual omni would hear.
 
 TIA
 
 Andy.
 
 
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Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position.

2013-09-23 Thread Andy Furniss

dw wrote:

On 22/09/2013 12:51, Andy Furniss wrote:

Hi

I do not have a 7.1 sound system so can't actually test this, also
as may become apparent I don't know much about sound :-)

I would be grateful if someone could correct/confirm the
following.

If I were to mix down a digital 7ch to mono I have to reduce by 1/7
 amplitude to prevent clipping, so one channel will be -16.9dBfs.



This assumes that all 7 channels are driven with the same maximum
level, in phase, and that this would get past the mastering stage,,
I'm sure they bear in mind the possibility of stereo, or mono
mixdown.


Yea I guess all channels full at once only really happens on the front
three in practice, mine was just an example to make the figures as
different as possible.

I don't quite understand the in phase though, are you saying that they
artificially adjust phase for the same sound that comes out of more than
one speaker to affect the mixdown?

Level wise, I don't think my method is any different from and software
decoder, except of course various channels get different weighting
before normalisation.
Peaking at 0dbfs is evident on a couple of film soundtracks, disk and
BBC broadcast I've just looked at (without compressing using the DRC
metadata, of course).

Of course in practice consumer 7.1 currently means TrueHD or DTS MA
which seems to be mixed up rather than down - so there is a studio
stereo mix there in the stream to be decoded directly.


If I play the track over one speaker the volume difference between
one and all channels will be 16.9dB.

If I were to measure the volume at listening position (assuming
anechoic and equal speaker distance) with a real 7 speaker setup
then the volume difference, because the speakers are not close,
would add up using power not amplitude so the difference
heard/measured between 1 and 7 at full power would only be 8.45dB,
so there is quite a large dynamic range discrepency?


You would add powers if the 7 channels had random relative phase
(which is less likely with anechoic and equal speaker distance


Ok, so would infinite distance planewaves playing the same sound add as
if the speakers were coupling (I thought you needed  1/2 wavelength for
this) to gain twice as much as power alone even though they are not in
the same direction? Or is this a just a mathematical perfect position
effect that wouldn't really happen in a real 7.1 setup even if the
speakers were playing the same sound?


The real reason for this question is more to do with simulation
than real life, so perhaps that will make a difference - if the
speakers are infinitely far producing planewaves and a soundfield
is at listening position would that change anything for what levels
the virtual omni would hear.


Sorry for all the questions - I would just like to understand if I use
supercolliders 7.0 ambisonic encoder so I can then do either personal
hrtf or uhj stereo decode, whether the simulation it uses is correct in
the sense of the levels I would get with a real soundfield measuring
real speakers.

Thanks.

Andy.



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Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position. (dw)

2013-09-23 Thread Andy Furniss

Ken Landers wrote:

While -16.9 might keep you safe, a better option might be -20 dBFS.
Gives some headroom in case you need it.  Also, many consumer
playback devices may not handle full scale output.


Interesting, I am not a producer of anything as such, but do see that a
lot of digital music and some films push 0dBfs (though at least the
films aren't anywhere near RMS)

Do you mean that consumer DACs can't handle it properly, or that the
analogue side doesn't being driven full voltage?

Andy.
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Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position.

2013-09-23 Thread Aaron Heller
On Mon, Sep 23, 2013 at 3:55 PM, Andy Furniss adf.li...@gmail.com wrote:



 I don't quite understand the in phase though, are you saying that they
 artificially adjust phase for the same sound that comes out of more than
 one speaker to affect the mixdown?


The Recording Academy recommendations for surround sound say (sec 4.3)

One potential problem that can arise from routing a signal into two or more
speakers is the danger of increased, and increasingly complex, comb
filtering. This problem multiplies as more speakers are engaged and can
become critical if downmixing is ever employed by the playback system.
Therefore, many experienced surround mixers selectively turn off channels
when bringing a sound inside the surround bubble or when dynamically
panning a sound from one area in the surround space to another.

It is recommended that whenever signal is placed into three, four, or five
speakers, it be decorrelated.



http://www2.grammy.com/PDFs/Recording_Academy/Producers_And_Engineers/SurroundRecommendations.pdf


--
Aaron (hel...@ai.sri.com)
Menlo Park, CA  US
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Re: [Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position. (dw)

2013-09-23 Thread Ken Landers
In years past, a number of systems has issues with intra-sample peaks.  While a 
technical 0 dBFS cleared, the interpolated level between the peaks would cause 
distortion.  From a best practices for broadcast point of view, my colleagues 
and I have just tried to steer clear of any overs, sample-wise or interpolated. 
 We started working to -20 dBFS RMS as a matter of course.  With the general 
move to 24 bit from 16 it's never presented any real issues.

And as it happens, SMPTE has also recommended -20 dBFS as a nominal operation 
level as well!

 On Sep 23, 2013, at 6:03 PM, Andy Furniss adf.li...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Ken Landers wrote:
 While -16.9 might keep you safe, a better option might be -20 dBFS.
 Gives some headroom in case you need it.  Also, many consumer
 playback devices may not handle full scale output.
 
 Interesting, I am not a producer of anything as such, but do see that a
 lot of digital music and some films push 0dBfs (though at least the
 films aren't anywhere near RMS)
 
 Do you mean that consumer DACs can't handle it properly, or that the
 analogue side doesn't being driven full voltage?
 
 Andy.
 
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[Sursound] Volume question WRT 7.1 sound recorded at listening position.

2013-09-22 Thread Andy Furniss

Hi

I do not have a 7.1 sound system so can't actually test this, also as 
may become apparent I don't know much about sound :-)


I would be grateful if someone could correct/confirm the following.

If I were to mix down a digital 7ch to mono I have to reduce by 1/7 
amplitude to prevent clipping, so one channel will be -16.9dBfs.


If I play the track over one speaker the volume difference between one 
and all channels will be 16.9dB.


If I were to measure the volume at listening position (assuming anechoic 
and equal speaker distance) with a real 7 speaker setup then the volume 
difference, because the speakers are not close, would add up using power 
not amplitude so the difference heard/measured between 1 and 7 at full 
power would only be 8.45dB, so there is quite a large dynamic range 
discrepency?


The real reason for this question is more to do with simulation than 
real life, so perhaps that will make a difference - if the speakers are 
infinitely far producing planewaves and a soundfield is at listening 
position would that change anything for what levels the virtual omni 
would hear.


TIA

Andy.


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