Moody wrote:Very entertaining to watch a neophyte (Sage, clearly has no sense of what headroom means) try to hold his opinion against a well trained magus (Tone, clearly understands, as an electrical engineer who designs audio circuits). Please Sage, enlighten us to the physics of how gain does not affect headroom, analog or digital, your choice.
Please do not take this as Tone and I our lovers, best buds or whatever one's limited perception may conjure. We clearly disagree on many ideas, but his knowledge of audio fidelity is impeccable.
I think Tone is on about mastering or when you clip a signal, using analogue equipment or has absolutely no idea what he's on about and just saying stuff he thinks sounds good.
And I'm not saying gain doesn't affect headroom, might want to try reading a bit more carefully!
All I'm saying is the exact same signal, no compression or anything added, just gain, isn't going to have less dynamic range if it's peaking at say -3dB than what it would at -6dB. Obviously with quieter signals, there is the noise floor to consider, which by that logic, the same signal when the gain is lowered will have less dynamic range rather than more as if you were to play the two signals at the same level, the quieter signal will have a touch more noise.
And anyone who thinks of clipping as purely analogue and digital is a noob in all respect.
