Telling the Twins Apart
Telling the Twins Apart
Of Ableton's two meters, side by side, which is the peak meter and which is the RMS? The user manual doesn't specify.
https://www.ableton.com/en/manual/mixing/
https://www.ableton.com/en/manual/mixing/
DAW: Ableton Live 9 Standard
OS: Windows 10
CPU: Intel i7
HRI: Scarlett 6i6
OS: Windows 10
CPU: Intel i7
HRI: Scarlett 6i6
Re: Telling the Twins Apart
Peak is the tallest one, RMS is the shorter one.
tarekith
https://tarekith.com
https://tarekith.com
Re: Telling the Twins Apart
They're the same height. You must be using an earlier version. I'm using Live Standard 9.Tarekith wrote:Peak is the tallest one, RMS is the shorter one.
DAW: Ableton Live 9 Standard
OS: Windows 10
CPU: Intel i7
HRI: Scarlett 6i6
OS: Windows 10
CPU: Intel i7
HRI: Scarlett 6i6
-
fishmonkey
- Posts: 4479
- Joined: Wed Oct 24, 2007 4:50 am
Re: Telling the Twins Apart
ah, they are not side-by-side.
side-by-side are the meters for the left + right channels. each of those two is a combined peak/RMS meter.
by definition the peak levels will exceed the RMS levels.
if you play some two-channel audio, you will see a pair of bright green bars, and popping up above those, dark green bars. the bright green sections are the RMS levels, the darker green bars are the peak levels. you will notice that the darker green bars react faster than the RMS bars. also, there are those small bright green horizontal lines, they are peak hold meters, and you will see that their levels are related to the dark green peak bars...
side-by-side are the meters for the left + right channels. each of those two is a combined peak/RMS meter.
by definition the peak levels will exceed the RMS levels.
if you play some two-channel audio, you will see a pair of bright green bars, and popping up above those, dark green bars. the bright green sections are the RMS levels, the darker green bars are the peak levels. you will notice that the darker green bars react faster than the RMS bars. also, there are those small bright green horizontal lines, they are peak hold meters, and you will see that their levels are related to the dark green peak bars...
Re: Telling the Twins Apart
How did you learn all this? I read every use of the word "peak" in the Ableton User Manual and didn't find 80% of this. All it says is that meters "show both peak and RMS levels."fishmonkey wrote:ah, they are not side-by-side.
side-by-side are the meters for the left + right channels. each of those two is a combined peak/RMS meter.
by definition the peak levels will exceed the RMS levels.
if you play some two-channel audio, you will see a pair of bright green bars, and popping up above those, dark green bars. the bright green sections are the RMS levels, the darker green bars are the peak levels. you will notice that the darker green bars react faster than the RMS bars. also, there are those small bright green horizontal lines, they are peak hold meters, and you will see that their levels are related to the dark green peak bars...
Thanks for the detailed explanation.
DAW: Ableton Live 9 Standard
OS: Windows 10
CPU: Intel i7
HRI: Scarlett 6i6
OS: Windows 10
CPU: Intel i7
HRI: Scarlett 6i6
-
jestermgee
- Posts: 4500
- Joined: Mon Apr 26, 2010 6:38 am
Re: Telling the Twins Apart
It's the same with all peak/rms level meters. Colours and arrangement of the display may change but "peak" is always going to be your max level (the peak level) and RMS is the average level so of course the average can never be bigger than the peak.