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TapeSim has the following controls
Input Level: This control allows you to alter the gain of
the audio entering the tape machine, before the Record
Level control, providing sufficient gain to the record level control.
Record Level: The Record Level control allows you to set
the amount of signal that will be recorded to tape, acting the same
as it would on an actual tape machine. Increasing the level of this
control will cause the tape to be saturated with signal,
which will cause distortion to the audio signal.
Warmth: This parameter controls the amount of non-linearity
(ratio of output level to input level) in the tape saturation portion
of the plug-in. With added warmth, the saturation/distortion effect
is much more pronounced-especially at higher record-levels.
Tape Speed: Just as the tape speed in an analog tape deck
will determine the quality and timbre of the recorded material,
this parameter affects the behavior of the plug-in in the following
ways:
- It affects the amount of high-frequency attenuation (loss).
As the tape speed decreases, more of the high frequencies are
lost.
- It changes the tape EQ curves that are being applied so that
they are correct for that speed.
- It changes the tape hiss characteristics (the frequency components
of the hiss shift higher as the tape speed increases).
EQ Curves: These are the standard equalization curves that
are used in professional analog tape machines, which are essentially
high-pass shelving filters which boost the high frequencies prior
to the signal being recorded on tape. In the analog world, these
filters are mostly meant to compensate for the roll-off (loss) of
high-frequencies due to various factors in the recording process,
including the thickness of the tape, head-gap loss and other factors.
Just as this roll-off is dependent on the tape speed, so are the
EQ curves. For example, at 30 ips (inches per second) the EQ boosts
less and at higher frequencies than at a lower tape speed (such
as 7.5 ips).
Added Hiss: This parameter controls the amount of noise
that is added to the signal after the tape saturation phase, simulating
the high frequency hiss that is inherent in magnetic tape recording.
It is important to note that changing the tape speed will affect
the frequency spectrum of the hiss -- just as it does in actual
tape machines. The greater the tape speed, the higher the frequency
component of the noise. Since hiss is often an undesired effect
of the magnetic recording process, we have provided the ability
for you to remove it by lowering this control to 0.
Output Gain: This control allows you to increase or decrease
the output level of the processed audio, after the effect has been
applied.
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