Sunday, 26 June 2016

Compression ratio

In a way, compression ratio and threshold are related, since both increasing the ratio and lowering the thershold will result in more compression being applied to the signal.
A more scientific way to show compression is through input versus output diagrams. We will find this type of graph in the user's manual of our unit. The 45 degree straight line represents the absence of dynamics processing, i.e., like a (loss less) cable. Above the threshold (which we have arbitrarily set to 0 dB), the 45 degree line deviates and forms another straight line with a slope that is lower the higher the compression ratio is. The line for the infinity:1 ratio shows a zero slope, since we are forcing the output signal to never exceed the threshold level, no matter what the input level is.
NOTE : If you find the graphs difficult to understand, look for an input level (horizontal axis) and follow it upwards in a straight line until you meet one of the compression lines. Take that point all the way to the left in a straight line to the output levels (vertical axis) and check that the level is lower. The example dotted gray line in the graph shows how a +10 dB input level becomes +5 dB a the output for a 2:1 compression ratio.

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