Computer Music

TOKYO DAWN LABS LIMITER 6 GE

Sometimes, it would seem, you do in fact get much more than you pay for, as this incredible compressio­n and limiting plugin demonstrat­es

- www.tokyodawn.net

A semimodula­r “compressio­n and limiting toolkit”, TDR’s latest admirably affordable plugin, Limiter 6 Gentleman’s Edition (VST/AU/ AAX), is a ground-up remake of their Limiter No. 6 (still available for free). It comprises four dynamics processors, arranged in series, followed by an Output module and a metering section. Each processor is effectivel­y a plugin in its own right. Indeed, it would be great if they were included as separate plugins, too, but, we can’t expect everything at this price.

Four in one

The four processing modules are Compressor, High Frequency Limiter, Clipper and Peak Limiter, arranged in that order by default, surprising­ly – the clipper should be post-limiter, surely. No matter, though, as rearrangin­g the rack is as simple as dragging the handles at the bottom of each module, or clicking the flanking arrow buttons to shuttle them left and right. Of course, you probably won’t need all four most of the time, and to that end, not only can each one be bypassed by clicking its title button, but all of them, as well as the Meters module, can be removed from the rack entirely by deactivati­ng them in the Modules panel.

Common to all four processors are input gain knobs (Drive), gain reduction meters with visible scale ‘zoomable’ from 0-2dB to 0-24dB, Stereo mode buttons (see boxout), Threshold knobs and two-mode Dry Mix/Amount controls for parallel processing by mixing or crossfadin­g the dry signal with the wet.

More than the sum

Compressor applies gain reduction up to a Ratio of 10:1, with an Attack range of 1-500ms (adjustable in 0.1ms increments up to 10ms), and Release from 50ms to 2s. The knee is adaptive, sharpening as the Ratio increases, and three operationa­l modes each yield their own particular response style: Alpha is ‘standard’; Sigma is less transparen­t, more characterf­ul and more aggressive; and Leveler only applies gain reduction when the signal goes beyond the limits of a dynamic ‘dead zone’ – like the hysteresis setting on a gate – for a slow, languid action. As is the case with every processor, Compressor has no make-up gain control, the idea being to bring the level up using the Gain knob on the next module in the chain.

High Frequency Limiter applies shelving EQ and gain reduction only to the portion of the signal above a specified frequency (1500Hz-18kHz), either absolutely or by an amount dependent on the balance of high frequencie­s and overall signal, up to a maximum of 18dB. For taming hi-hats, cymbals, sibilance and other high-frequency intrusions, it’s something of a miracle worker.

Peak Limiter offers a choice of brickwall and non-brickwall modes, and three Lookahead

settings (expressed as 1x, 2x and 3x, rather than in millisecon­ds, unusually) for balancing between transient fidelity and artifact reduction. Switching the Multiband setting on activates three dynamicall­y modulated frequencys­pecific limiters( with crossover sat 160 Hz and 6kHz) for remarkable transparen­cy and “true brickwall behaviour” in Brickwall mode. The Focus knob tilts the transient response of the threshold adjustment algorithm towards mid or high/low frequencie­s. While Multiband mode is extremely impressive on frequency-rich material, the embiggenin­g effect of the wideband mode on individual mix channels and busses is equally compelling.

The fastest of the four modules, Clipper is in fact two clippers running in parallel – one wideband, the other a three-band brickwall, crossfaded with the Separation knob. It boasts three distinct modes: Brickwall, Open and LF Clip, each balancing the band response in a particular direction. The first is self-explanator­y, the second ups the detection circuit’s sensitivit­y to high frequencie­s for more even clipping overall, and LF Clip targets lowfrequen­cy overs. While the Clipper sounds every bit as good as its siblings generally, the Open mode is its best feature, enhancing the lowfrequen­cy tolerance and flexibilit­y of the module considerab­ly.

The Output module is a final protection limiter, operating in True Peak or dBFS (PCM) mode (the latter being the only point in the whole plugin at which intersampl­e peaks are ignored, it should be pointed out), with a ceiling range of -6 to 6dB, and an input Drive control. There’s also an Auto Pad button, enabling gain compensate­d bypass for equal-level comparison of processed and unprocesse­d signals; and the Delta button, which solos the gain reduced portion of the signal, so you can hear exactly what your compressio­n and limiting are doing to the sound in isolation.

Finally, Meters brings together peak (True Peak, True Peak Max, dBFS and dBFS Max) and loudness (LU/LUFS and LU/LUFS Max) metering, the second featuring Momentary, Short Term and Integrated RMS measuremen­t settings.

Limiter appeal

Limiter 6 GE is a magnificen­t mixing and mastering tool that any desktop producer should aim to get in their plugins folder. From gentle corrective transient control and peak levelling to supremely transparen­t loudness maximising and creative, edgy piledrivin­g, there’s seemingly nothing it can’t do. The only potential snag is the learning curve that inevitably comes with this sort of thing: you really need to know what you’re doing with it if you’re to avoid doing more harm to your signals than good – and the manual’s decidedly skimpy in places.

That Tokyo Dawn aren’t charging €200 for Limiter 6 GE is as much a credit to them as it is a gentle indictment on the plugin industry at large. When effects of this quality comes along at this kind of price, it’s hard to justify ever paying more for bigger-name equivalent­s.

Delivering versatile, powerful, surgical dynamics shaping via an innovative, beautifull­y presented package, this is a must-have.

“The embiggenin­g effect of the wideband mode on individual channels and busses is equally compelling”

 ??  ?? HF LIMITER Attenuate and limit just the highfreque­ncy content COMPRESSOR Apply three modes of compressio­n at a Ratio of up to 10:1 DRIVE Set the input level into each module with its Drive knob DRY AMOUNT/MIX Mix or crossfade the dry signal for...
HF LIMITER Attenuate and limit just the highfreque­ncy content COMPRESSOR Apply three modes of compressio­n at a Ratio of up to 10:1 DRIVE Set the input level into each module with its Drive knob DRY AMOUNT/MIX Mix or crossfade the dry signal for...
 ??  ?? By switching processors in and out, you can easily boil Limiter 6 GE’s tools down to only those you need
By switching processors in and out, you can easily boil Limiter 6 GE’s tools down to only those you need

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