Hey guys,
since I obtained T-RackS the Multiband Limiter was always a mystery to me. But as someone who does not fear the unkown I spend a lot of time in understanding this unit and have to say THIS THINGY IS THE BOMB!
I know that this one has been inspired by some pretty well known hardware device (iirc Nine Inch Nailes use this on the VOX bus to keep the output of it en par with the rest of the band).
Right now this one is on every drum bus in my mixes. It adds lots of punch and makes everything unbelievable loud (in a good way like in "no other device can do that") BUT keeps the transients and the dynamics at the same time. Some people say that "the first 6db of GR are free" when they use the hardware unit which means nothing more than that if you use 6dB in gainreduction the material sounds still the same but only "better" and without loosing any character. 6dB in audio is a lot. But things are getting more interesting if pushed even further and this unit behaves pretty well.
The thing is that the promotional soundcloud example from IKM on this particular device does not help that much because it´s only some A/B and that´s it. But it can do so much more and I show you some tips how you could start in using this device:
On the left side you have the "threshold & eq" section. Leave them @ 0dB for now. You have to understand that this one is a MULTIBAND device which splits the signal into three different signals (low, mid, high) and then applies some sort of tricky algorithm in the summing section where those three signals will be combined again. In this section you can boost & cut frequencies but also set the threshold where limiting occurs.
Below that knobs you will find two rotarys that represent the crossover frequencies where the signal will be "split" into the three bands.
I have four different presets that are more or less inspired from the manual of the 1st edition HW units: 80Hz & 1.5kHz / 80Hz & 4.5kHz / 160Hz & 1.5kHz / 160Hz & 4.5 KkHz.
Those four different cross over freq settings are all you need if you wanna start fresh. Limiting the lowend below 80Hz/160Hz, limiting the high freqs from either 1.5kHz or 4.5kHz upwards and of course the mids between them.
Limiting is not compression. In compression you use your threshold as your main controller to get your comp working. The more you dial in the more quieter the signal gets. Usually you adjust things afterwards in making it louder again with the makeup gain. Limiting is exactly the opposite. Instead of "making things quieter" you start right away in "making things louder". So what you actually do is you are "adjusting the volume first" and then taking care of the rest (eg getting rid of unwanted distortion).
And for this we have DRIVE, RELEASE TIME & OVERLOAD. Drive is making things louder (of course). Now what does Overload do? With overload you have some control of how your transients behave when limiting engages (think about it like mix between a softknee clipper that can hardclip too and some tricky auto attack settings). Fully right (positive dB...iirc 6dB is max) the signal is "more clear" and more transients pass and the signal will even become more louder, fully left (negative values) it sounds more clipped and with softer transients, 0dB is somewhere inbetween and +2dB is the recommended setting from the manual of the latter unit with the variable overdive knob if someone want to achieve the original settings from the first unit.
But you have to adjust your RELEASE times as well in order to get the most out of it. I like extreme settings when I wanna find the best settings so I ususally start with the slowest (full right) or the fastest (fully left) release time and then dial in the other way.
Release timings thumprule: fast release = CAN (!!!) distort but sounds punchier and more clear, the slower the release becomes the more the limiter is working until a point where it is contantly on.
Normally I like my drums punchy and I mostly start with Overrload fully right and fastest release settings. Then I dial in DRIVE until my GR meter hits 3-6dB and adjust all three knobs until everything sound fine. I also switch between my 4 different crossover freq patches for this because every preset sounds different.
One thing you have to keep in mind: this thingy can clip (especially with fast release and positive overload settings). I normall have the output at -1dB but also use a clipper or /and brickwall after that to catch peaks.
After I have found the settings I like I usually start to raise or lower single knobs either in the threshold or eq section but most of the time the default 0dB settings are fine. Sometimes I raise bass & high freqs in the eq section a bit (3dB each), sometime I use a +3dB threshold boost on my mids in the threshold section.
I really love this unit and wanna say thanks to IKM for giving me this really unique device. And I hope some of you find this post helpful and feel encouraged in using it a little bit more if not already.
Regards
Sebastian