ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
4 beolab 5, beolab 9, beolab 10, beolab 5000, beolab 8000 mk2, beolab 6002, beolab 3500, beovision 7 55 mk2, 2 beovision 11 46 mk4, beotime, beosound ouverture, beosound essence, beoplay A8, beomaster 900 RG de luxe and the collection continues...
Dynamic compression will make the difference between the soft and loud passages smaller. This generally means that the loud sounds will get quieter and the quiet sounds will get louder, so there is less difference between them. This is particularly useful when, for example, you're listening at night and you don't want a sudden explosion to wake up everyone in the house. It's also useful during parties when you never want the music to get quiet.
Hope this helps.
Cheers
-geoff
It's in many cases what gives you listening fatique from radio channels aimed at the younger people.They use compression to "sound smart". - Or whatever.Sounds awful if you ask me.
Martin
Thanks for that Geoff, useful for many films where the speaking is quiet but action and music are way too loud (even our 16 year old complains about that) and we have to keep changing the volume on the TV to put up with it. This should help reduce that then?
By the way, I was at the press launch on behalf of Beoworld in London on Thursday. Your sound demo on the BeoVision Avant was excellent. Obviously a massive ammont of thought and effort has been put into the '3-channel stereo' concept and application. Great work. Many thanks but it's going to now leave me £6,000 lighter!
Dave.
You can use or mis-use 'dynamic compression'.
Nowadays it is mostly mis-used!
MM
There is a tv - and there is a BV
hello,
i have a bv7-40 mk5. on my sound adjustment menu, i have loudness, but not dynamic compression. could this be a firmware thing ? thanks !
- scott