Hi everyone,
I was wandering if there is a way to amplify a signal by lets say 1dB. The way I control Volume is by [*~] from 0 to 1, but that does not tell us anything regarding dB.
Thanks
Volume Control (dB)
Hi everyone,
I was wandering if there is a way to amplify a signal by lets say 1dB. The way I control Volume is by [*~] from 0 to 1, but that does not tell us anything regarding dB.
Thanks
To be honest with you I don't understand this conversion. Please see below the screenshot. Does this mean that if I want to amplify a signal 20dB I add 0.0001, it doesn't make sense.
Thank you very much again
well, db is an logarithmic unit, since our perception of volume is "logarithmic".. does that make sense?
Yes I can understand that... but 20dB ->[dbtorms]->0.0001. If I use this value (0.0001) I don't get 20dB reduction or amplification on the signal.
sorry i'm not a native english speaker, so i have some trouble to explain that but i'll try. db is always relative.. so with an dbfs scale you'll get full blast at 0 db, with dbtorms you get full amplitude at 100 db. 94 db would mean half of the amplitude -> *~ 0.5. 20 db is almost nothing, nonperceptible.
Thank you so much for your answers. I can understand all that (I have a phd on acoustics), but for example a signal that is 0dB (electroacoustic signal) and I want to reduce that to -3dB, is that doable with a command? Just to give an example wave editors can do ->amplify->-1dB
hm. if you do it like
[+ 100]
|
[dbtorms] ?
i'm not quite sure what you are heading for..
I am trying to be able to amplify by lets say -20dB or +20dB the played sound file a.wav:
@Spyros
As you know 3dB does not really mean anything..... dB being a relative scale only +3dB or -3dB has any meaning.......
David
Thank you very much David! I am just curious to understand why you say dB does not mean anything.
If I have a file playing from my speakers and I have a sound level meter and I see 80dB and then I use a wave editor and I amplify it by -3dB then I will see on the meter 77dB.
@Spyros ..........Sorry Spyros...... I meant inside the program.......
In the real world it is of course a true measurement relative to the power of the smallest discernible sound........ which I remember being a cricket at 100M? in a quiet environment.....
And please let us know whether the patch actually gives you the true response on your meter!
David
Thank you very much for your answer. I will measure tomorrow and get back to you. Thank you again for everything!
David just checked with my home speakers and it works perfectly fine! I will check more in depth tomorrow but I am sure that it will be fine.
Thank you very much
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