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#11
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My current favorite VU meter is the Waves VU. The PSP Triple Meter is also excellent. Don’t know how you all mix without a proper VU meter.
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offthewallproductions Mac Pro 5,1 3.46 Ghz 12 core, Open Core 0.8.8, Radeon RX580 GPU, GC-TITAN RIDGE TB3 PCIe card, M.2 NVMe SSD boot drive on PCIe card, 48GB RAM, macOS 12.6.3 Pro Tools Ultimate 2022.12 HDX, UA Octo PCIe card in external TB3 chassis, MTRX Studio I/O, C|24 control surface. Genelec 1031AP/7070A 5.1 monitoring. |
#12
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“Don’t know how you all mix without a proper VU meter.“
Do it all the time. The Master track has a meter on it. |
#13
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Learning to mix at school looking at the VU meters on the API 2488, I can kinda relate...
However, give me access to a few good references, a loudness meter, and some time, and those are more vital to making way toward a good mix. The VU meter on its own wouldn't make or break things for me. I rarely pull up a digital version. Sometimes I like visual metering at different timescales but that's basically what VU is helping one to model- it doesn't technically have to be that very analog looking VU meter to see the audio levels across different time windows. Perhaps the name "VU" is misleading here. Good metering is super important. Spectrum, dB, etc, but I remember "at school" learning that VU meant "voltage unit" but that DAWs weren't literally voltages discharging, so it is all just digital metering in a digital system... But the real important question is "where is any meter and how should I use it"? Or "what kind of meter do you mean? what do you want to see exactly?" Honestly I'm curious, but it's a little bit of an historical oddity..... I heard the VU representation is more like "seeing RMS" than peak. Also, there are time settings for the meter display in Preferences, so maybe that could provide the same functionality albeit different appearance.
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___ >> me: nednednerB // ||main gig: editing audio & testing software / 2nd gig: music software tutoring // ||software: Monterey 12.5.1 | PT Studio 2022.10 | Ableton Live 11 | iZotope RX, Ozone, Neutron | Arturia Pigments | Auto-Tune | Dubler2 // ||system: iMac (Retina 5K, 27", 2020) 10-Core-i9 | 128GB-DDR4 | 5700-XT-16GB // ||devices: Focusrite Clarett 2Pre | some AT condenser mics | SM58 | Ableton Push 2 | 32" 4k LG secondary display // ||automation: SoundFlow | Keyboard Maestro | SteerMouse // Last edited by nednednerb; 11-25-2022 at 11:22 PM. Reason: also.... |
#14
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No, VU stands for "Volume Unit" and the ballistics were an early attempt at metering the perceived loudness or intensity of program - These days replaced by LUFS metering which does a better job of monitoring loudness. Good metering (and understanding it) is essential, but a good monitor setup with calibrated SPL control will tell you most of what you need to know without ever looking at a meter.
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http://www.richbreen.com ---------------------------------------- MacPro 5,1 Dual Hex, OS 10.14.6, PT 2022.6 HDX, Avid HD I/Os and Metric Halo ULN8, 3xS1/Dock. Also running a 2013 nMP / HDX / S6 Last edited by Rich Breen; 11-26-2022 at 11:14 AM. |
#15
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#16
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Possibly because I “grew up” on VU meters but setting your VU meter reference to 2db hotter than your LUFS target will get you REALLY close in a more “organic” way IMO.
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offthewallproductions Mac Pro 5,1 3.46 Ghz 12 core, Open Core 0.8.8, Radeon RX580 GPU, GC-TITAN RIDGE TB3 PCIe card, M.2 NVMe SSD boot drive on PCIe card, 48GB RAM, macOS 12.6.3 Pro Tools Ultimate 2022.12 HDX, UA Octo PCIe card in external TB3 chassis, MTRX Studio I/O, C|24 control surface. Genelec 1031AP/7070A 5.1 monitoring. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
why external vu meter/ plug-in vu meter differ? | sjtae | macOS | 8 | 06-06-2012 06:50 PM |
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Does a VU Meter Plug-In exist? | Matt_Bauer | 003, Mbox 2, Digi 002, original Mbox, Digi 001 (Mac) | 12 | 10-31-2002 01:25 AM |
Does a V/U Meter Plug-In Exist? | Matt_Bauer | Pro Tools TDM Systems (Mac) | 3 | 12-15-2000 12:40 PM |