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Junior Varsity
Wired/Wireless microphone dynamic processing
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<blockquote data-quote="TJ Cornish" data-source="post: 38971" data-attributes="member: 162"><p>Re: Wired/Wireless microphone dynamic processing</p><p></p><p>I'm confused at what I see as a logic jump - you want dynamics processing on a microphone to protect a monitor from blowing? If you want loudspeaker protection, the only way to accomplish that is with some kind of loudspeaker processor set for limiting on the output of your mixer before the amp/speaker. Compression usually contributes to speaker damage as it raises the average power delivered to the device, and yet is not usually fast enough to squash transients to protect from over excursion. Compression can also lead to increased feedback.</p><p></p><p>If you want a compressed vocal sound, use a compressor. If you want speaker protection, use a speaker processor with limiting capability.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TJ Cornish, post: 38971, member: 162"] Re: Wired/Wireless microphone dynamic processing I'm confused at what I see as a logic jump - you want dynamics processing on a microphone to protect a monitor from blowing? If you want loudspeaker protection, the only way to accomplish that is with some kind of loudspeaker processor set for limiting on the output of your mixer before the amp/speaker. Compression usually contributes to speaker damage as it raises the average power delivered to the device, and yet is not usually fast enough to squash transients to protect from over excursion. Compression can also lead to increased feedback. If you want a compressed vocal sound, use a compressor. If you want speaker protection, use a speaker processor with limiting capability. [/QUOTE]
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