![]() However, I just thought of a possible problem when using a separate maximiser (or brickwall limiter) and dithering plugins. ![]() ![]() It even has inter-sample clipping prevention. ![]() I am used to using Ozone’s Maximizer, which incorporates dithering, so ensuring no clipping. Why does Cubase have three plug-ins for this, when they all seem to do the same thing? What am I overlooking? Isn’t that exactly what the limiters do? I’ve always thought of limiters as allowing me to raise the gain (which raises the loudness) while ensuring that peaks don’t clip. “Maximizer: This plug-in raises the loudness of audio material without the risk of clipping.” (p. Those descriptions seem virtually identical to me, so how should I decide whether to use the Limiter or the Brickwall Limiter? “Limiter: This plug-in is designed to ensure that the output level never exceeds a set output level, to avoid clipping in following devices.” (p. “Brickwall Limiter ensures that the output level never exceeds a set limit.” (p. The Cubase 8 Plug-in Reference manual says, What’s the difference between Maximizer, Limiter, and Brickwall Limiter? They all do the same the same thing in my mind, so I must be missing something, since Cubase has three separate Dynamics Plug-ins for them.
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