320d, Introduction – Aphex 320D Compellor User Manual

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320D

Compellor

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3.1 About This Manual
This manual reflects the new digital audio features of the Model 320D. It contains much of

the material found in the older 320A/323A manual but has been updated and streamlined to

make it easier to use. There is also new content specific to digital audio.

3.2 What Is A Compellor?
A Compellor is the first and only product designed specifically for the transparent control of

audio levels. While other audio processors are designed simply to compress and limit audio

signals, a Compellor is designed to intelligently manage the dynamic range of audio without

causing noticeable changes to the character and feeling of the sound. Contained within the

Compellor are three gain controllers: a frequency discriminate leveler, a compressor, and a

limiter, all working interactively. In addition, a dynamic verification gate, silence gate, and

dynamic release computer intelligently guide the operation of the gain controllers to assure

the least noticeable processing effects will be generated.

The name “Compellor” is a combination of “Compressor-Leveler-Limiter”.

3.3 What Does It Do?
Simply stated, a Compellor automatically evens out the varying levels in an audio system

without making itself noticed. It may seem odd to have a processor you wouldn’t notice work-

ing, but imagine being able to keep a wandering vocal track just right in the mix as if the talent

were using perfect voice techniques. Imagine a TV show that always sounded just the right

level even though scene changes were wide ranging. Now imagine these things without any

background swells, pinched voices, or holes punched by a transient hitting the limiter. If you

can, then you realize just a few things the Compellor can accomplish.

Without a Compellor, it is usual to insert a compressor or limiter in the line to control varying

levels. That always results in degraded sound due to the processing by-products. Lost punch,

overly fat backgrounds, inversion (when a loud sound gets lower than average), suck-down

by transients, and noise swell ups are typical problems encountered with usual processing.

The Compellor was designed specifically to avoid all of these problems and more.

3.4 How Does It Work?
Standard compressors and limiters process the sound on arbitrary principles of level detec-

tion, something like an audio VU or peak meter. Our hearing is a much more complex pro-

cess and we can readily hear the “attenuate and recover” effects caused by these simpler

devices.

In contrast, a Compellor automatically detects and corrects the sound level according to how

we hear, and therefore seems natural and relatively undetectable. The unique and patented

circuitry in a Compellor resulted from years of experiments in audio processing and creates

the only level controller on the market designed specifically to be as “transparent” to the ear

as possible. Additional information about the processing circuits in a Compellor will be found

in the various sections of this manual.

3.5 A Bit Of Compellor History
At first, there was a controversy about whether a Compellor actually did anything. Engineers

would call up and complain they couldn’t hear the difference between “in” and “out” of the

3. Introduction

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