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Submitted by anonymous on Tue, 04/26/2005 - 08:52

I'm curious to know what level most people master videos at? When mastering (which I don't claI'm to be very good at) I never know what meters to choose. I have the Waves Platinum bundle and I'm always wondering what I should be looking at. RMS, Peak, Fast, Slow, Moderate, A, B, C -weighted? I know everyone says "just use your ears" but I'd love to know what everyone else does. Thanks!

Comments

for tv, in the u.s., nominal zero is -20dbfs..
but peaks are allowed, there's like a 12 db headroom..
I wonder though, are commercials super ultramaximized to -20dbfs, or do they use the extra headroom?
When i was working for nbc at the olympics, I had an rms limiter set to
-20dbfs (+4dbu), as it was rms, there were peaks anyway..sounded terrible though, but that's the way they always work at nbc sports apparently..
Now dvd's are different though..I guess you could just use the whole headroom up to 0dbfs..
?
most dvd's from tv productions i come across, put the t.v. level straight to dvd. (u.s. like i said before, europe -18dbfs nominal, -9 dbfs
maximum)

Wed, 04/27/2005 - 14:24 Permalink

I use spectrafoo for metering. it depends on what the content is and what program i'm using. If it's spoken word stuff, I just use the meters in that program and average it out. If it's more complex, I'll use spectrafoo which has every meter you can think of. Your best bet would be to take a DVD and either play it or rip the audio and see where it sits in your system. the dialog, because it's not very transient, should average out around -12db with peak meters.

Thu, 04/28/2005 - 12:46 Permalink