MP3Gain and Clipping
Reply #18 – 2007-09-15 01:40:23
whatever is lower than 89dB is probably NOT clipping, you shouldn't even touch these ones! unless they're part of an album in which other songs are much louder and you want to keep a consistency lowering the whole album at let's say -3.0dB. greynol is right - it's difficult/impossible to hear the clipping. I stopped dealing with MP3Gain once I knew there's no way to make a destroyed record to sound better. Bourne, This is something I've been wondering about for years. I was originally turned on mp3gain right here at HA, because my reading at the time was that it normalizes volume (sets gain equal) w/o compression or data loss (I assume this is still correct?). I'm fairly pleased with the results (works as promised), but what has always struck me as strange is that every time I encode a new batch of music, mp3gain claims that about 1/3rd of the tracks are already clipping (same problem as the OP). I doubt that LAME is the culprit, so that would have to mean that the tracks are essentially clipping "from the factory," as it were. Do you know: -How that could be the case? Is this part of the ongoing bad mastering/loudness war debate? -Are these "factory" clips audible? I've heard test samples that sound awful but I believe they were clipped on purpose. -Is a clipping file analogous to a clipping (current underdrawn) amplifier? And if so, how could the former possibly be repaired? After all, an underpowered amp clips because it cannot reproduce the waveform at the requested volume, but it doesn't "damage" the wave per se. We can always lower the gain and things will sound fine. But if a file itself is "clipping" (the mechanics of which I don't entirely understand), wouldn't that mean that the wave has been permanently altered/damaged by that "flat-topping" effect (hard clipping), and if so, how could mp3gain possibly remedy that situation? Lost data is lost data. About the only thing you could do (in theory) to help would be to apply some sort of "tube-like" modeling to the damaged portions, ala "soft clipping." T