I'm
a synth guy getting more and more into recording and mixing my own
tunes. One thing that stumps me is the issue of 'headroom': for example,
in the case of my Focusrite Saffire Pro 26 I/O, the manual says that
using the PSU rather than Firewire bus power yields 6dB of additional
headroom in the preamps. I assume that this is a good thing, but how so?
What is headroom and why do I want more of it? How do I know it's there
(or not there), and how can I take advantage of it?
Via SOS web site
SOS Technical Editor Hugh Robjohns replies: These are all good
questions. Every audio‑passing system (analogue or digital) has two
limits: at the quiet end there is the noise floor, normally
a constant background hiss into which signals can be faded until they
become inaudible; and at the loud end there is clipping, the point where
the system can no longer accommodate an increase in signal level and
gross distortion results. The latter is generally due to the signal
level approaching the power supply voltage levels in analogue systems,
or the coding format running out of numbers to count more quantising
levels in digital systems.
Obviously, we need to keep the signal level somewhere between these
two extremes to maximise quality: somewhere well above the noise floor
but comfortably below the clipping point. In analogue systems, this is
made practical and simple by defining a nominal working level and
encouraging people to stick to that by scaling the meters in a suitable
way. For example, VU meters are scaled so that 0VU usually equates to
+4dBu. The clipping point in professional analogue gear is typically
around +24dBu, so around 20dB higher than the nominal level indicated on
the VU meter.
That 20dB of available (but ideally unused) dynamic‑range space is
called the headroom, or is referred to as the headroom margin. It
provides a buffer zone to accommodate unexpected transients or loud
sounds without risking clipping. It's worth noting that no analogue
metering system displays much of the headroom margin. Rather, it's an
'unseen' safety region that is easy to overlook and take for granted. In
most digital systems, the metering tends to show the entire headroom
margin, because the meter is scaled downards from the clipping point at
0dBFS. The top 20dB or so of a digital scale is showing the headroom
margin that is typically invisible on the meters of analogue systems. As
a result, many people feel they are 'under‑recording' on digital
systems if they don't peak their signals well up the scale, when in fact
they are actually over‑recording and at far greater risk of transient
distortion.
The reason why your interface offers greater headroom when operating
from its external power supply is because the PSU provides
a higher‑voltage power rail than is possible when the unit is running
from the USB power supply. A higher supply voltage means that a large
signal voltage can be accommodated; in this case, twice as large, hence
the 6dB greater headroom margin. More headroom means you have to worry
less about transient peaks causing clipping distortion, and generally
translates to a more open and natural sound, so it's a good thing.
Published February 2010
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Welcome to No Limit Sound Productions
| Company Founded | 2005 |
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| Overview | Our services include Sound Engineering, Audio Post-Production, System Upgrades and Equipment Consulting. |
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