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Topic: What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do? (Read 10089 times) previous topic - next topic
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What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Is it peak normalization or RMS normalization? From what I have seen, it does not seem like peak normalization. It's more like a form of RMS in that it averages RMS energy over entire file, unlike Replaygain which averages over 50ms blocks. Does any body know what type of algorithm does Soundcheck use?


What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #2
My suspicion is that its less likely to be peak normalisation.  I usually have it on though I read on ipodlounge that turning it on will drain your battery more.  (I doubt it is that much to be easily measurable)

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #3
Quote
My suspicion is that its less likely to be peak normalisation.  I usually have it on though I read on ipodlounge that turning it on will drain your battery more.  (I doubt it is that much to be easily measurable)
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=345448"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

You really shouldn't believe everything you read. Especially not anything you read on iPodLounge.

Turning on SoundCheck will, in fact, make your battery last longer in the vast majority of cases. Although the difference will most likely not be truly measurable. The reason for this is simple: SoundCheck usually has the effect of reducing the volume on most tracks. It doesn't have a large amount of wiggle room to raise the volume, but it has a huge amount of room to lower it, and this is what it generally does. Lower volume = less power used = more battery life. Simple.

Anybody telling you that SoundCheck drains the battery is on crack.

 

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #5
Quote
Quote
My suspicion is that its less likely to be peak normalisation.  I usually have it on though I read on ipodlounge that turning it on will drain your battery more.  (I doubt it is that much to be easily measurable)
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=345448"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

You really shouldn't believe everything you read. Especially not anything you read on iPodLounge.

Turning on SoundCheck will, in fact, make your battery last longer in the vast majority of cases. Although the difference will most likely not be truly measurable. The reason for this is simple: SoundCheck usually has the effect of reducing the volume on most tracks. It doesn't have a large amount of wiggle room to raise the volume, but it has a huge amount of room to lower it, and this is what it generally does. Lower volume = less power used = more battery life. Simple.

Anybody telling you that SoundCheck drains the battery is on crack.
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=345456"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]



It could definitely lead to greater battery usage due to having to "crank" the volume higher to hear reduced tracks.

Also, I believe soundcheck is very closely related to the replaygain algorithim(s).
"You can fight without ever winning, but never win without a fight."  Neil Peart  'Resist'

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #6
It's RMS but seems to take fewer samples for analysis (it's very fast). You can check the value that replaygain and soundcheck give, and they're usually fairly close.

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #7
Assume you have two versions of a song, identical except that one is mastered louder. You play them so that they both sound equally loud.  In other words, the volume control is set higher on the softer one than the louder one.

Will they use different amouns of battery power?

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #8
Generally, the one mastered "hotter" will use more battery because of a higher bitrate (VBR only).
"You can fight without ever winning, but never win without a fight."  Neil Peart  'Resist'

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #9
Quote
Quote
Quote
My suspicion is that its less likely to be peak normalisation.  I usually have it on though I read on ipodlounge that turning it on will drain your battery more.  (I doubt it is that much to be easily measurable)
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=345448"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

You really shouldn't believe everything you read. Especially not anything you read on iPodLounge.

Turning on SoundCheck will, in fact, make your battery last longer in the vast majority of cases. Although the difference will most likely not be truly measurable. The reason for this is simple: SoundCheck usually has the effect of reducing the volume on most tracks. It doesn't have a large amount of wiggle room to raise the volume, but it has a huge amount of room to lower it, and this is what it generally does. Lower volume = less power used = more battery life. Simple.

Anybody telling you that SoundCheck drains the battery is on crack.
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=345456"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]



It could definitely lead to greater battery usage due to having to "crank" the volume higher to hear reduced tracks.

Also, I believe soundcheck is very closely related to the replaygain algorithim(s).
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=345463"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]


I plotted a bunch of values for songs generated from the two algorythms a while back when Areo was working on foo_pod.  There generally wasn't a huge difference, though there were strange samples where the two would be 10+ dB apart (generally on very quite material).  One of the songs on Perfect Circle's second disk was an extreme example of that. 

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You really shouldn't believe everything you read. Especially not anything you read on iPodLounge.


Agreed.  That place is filled with misinformation.

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Assume you have two versions of a song, identical except that one is mastered louder. You play them so that they both sound equally loud. In other words, the volume control is set higher on the softer one than the louder one.

Will they use different amouns of battery power?


No.  However thats not really relevent.  What Otto is saying is that in generaly RG/SC almost always make songs quiter, so if you enable it, the result will be a (very slightly) reduced amount of power dissipated by the amplifer.

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #10
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It could definitely lead to greater battery usage due to having to "crank" the volume higher to hear reduced tracks.[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=345463"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

I dunno. People fiddling with the volume more often might overcompensate and thus play their music louder.

In any case, SoundCheck itself won't cause the battery to drain more.

What type of nomalization does Soundcheck do?

Reply #11
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It's RMS but seems to take fewer samples for analysis (it's very fast). You can check the value that replaygain and soundcheck give, and they're usually fairly close.
[{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]


This makes sense to me. I was thinking that it averaged over an entire file, not just longer blocks. I have updated by blog with this new info.
[a href="http://manishbansal.blogspot.com/2005/11/how-to-fix-ipod-eq-distortion.html]http://manishbansal.blogspot.com/2005/11/h...distortion.html[/url]