898 Chapter 25
alone sparked by the AM radio loudness wars of the
’60s and ’70s; the deleterious effect will have future
musical historians scratching their heads.
Every recording and transmission medium has defi-
nite head room limitations, a maximum level beyond
which the signal just plain overloads, distorts, or
becomes a serious liability. AM radio overmodulation
not only sounds horrid but causes interfering splatter up
and down the dial, FM transmitter overdeviation causes
adjacent channel interference and runs the risk of distor-
tion in receiver discriminators; disk cutters can produce
grooves that run into each other (long after they become
unplayable by any normal pickup), PA loudspeakers fry,
tape saturates, distorts, and screams, and best of all
anything digital just plain runs out of bits and cracks up.
The answer? A device that senses when enough is
nearly enough and automatically reduces the source
level such that a proscribed output level is not trans-
gressed. This is a limiter.
Fig. 25-76A shows the all-time basic limiter—a pair
of back-to-back diodes. These clamp the input signal
from the source resistor to within their nonconductive
range; beyond 700 mV of either polarity one or other of
the diodes conducts, sawing off any excessive signal.
Brutal, but effective. The downside is gross distor-
tion—serious waveform modification is going on, prof-
ligate audible distortion products are generated. Fig.
25-76B shows the same idea with germanium diodes.
These tend to have a lower turn-on voltage
(200–300 mV) but a gentler knee, with the effect
shown. This sounds considerably less harsh—fewer
high-order distortion products are being created. In situ-
ations where ultimate signal quality is not necessary, but
increased signal density (translated: loud) is required,
these clipping circuits work like a charm; communica-
tion circuits often use this technique to saw the top
10 dB or so peaks off speech and thus gain a nearly
corresponding degree of increased apparent loudness.
The trick is to filter away or contain and control the
resulting distortion products such that they become less
agonizing, while retaining the high signal density clip-
ping affords. Such is meat for a whole other saga.
The ideal circuit is one that knows its input is going
over the top and can reduce its gain such that the signal
is left relatively undistorted but as loud as it can be
within the given constraints. Fig. 25-76C is a block
diagram of such a device. The side chain circuit is a
tripwire in this instance; if the amplifier output exceeds
a stipulated level (just below what the destination can
handle) the side chain develops a control signal that
Figure 25-72. Frequency response of the low-frequency
section of Fig. 25-71 (control at maximum gain).
Figure 25-73. Characteristics of the high-frequency section
of Fig. 25-71 (boost-cut control at maximum boost).
Shelving response when capacitor is shorted
+20
dB
+10
35 Hz
min
200 Hz
max
100 1k 10k
Frequency–Hz
+20
+10
1k 2k 5k 10k 20k
Min
5 kHz10 kHz
Max
20 kHz
Frequency–Hz
Figure 25-74. Typical insert points for dynamic processing.
1 Preequalizer
2 Postequalizer (prefader)
3 Post fader (Rare)
4 Group
Mic
amp
1
Equalizer
2 3
Main
fader
Pan
Mix buses 4L
Pan
Mix
amps
R
Group
fader
4R
L L
Line
amps Outputs
Left
RRRight
High pass
filter