DAW Sound Engine Comparison

Which Computer? Hard drive? Audio interface? Mic? Preamp? 3rd party plug-in? + Production techniques

DAW Sound Engine Comparison

Postby constantino101 » Mon Sep 01, 2008 12:30 pm

Hey Guys,

Does anyone think theres any differences between the audio engine of Logic compared to cubase or pro tools?

You hear people say that pro tools has 'a sound' but surely the only differences must be the plugins as far as sound?

can anyone here make comparisons between these?


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Postby David » Mon Sep 01, 2008 5:26 pm

Yes, there is a difference in the audio engines and their summing algorithms, even if you don't use plug-ins.

http://www.logicprohelp.com/viewtopic.php?t=6632

Oops, the link is dead... maybe someone will fish it out? EDIT: Thanks Eric for fishing it out. The new link is:

http://duc.digidesign.com/showthread.php?t=181402
Last edited by David on Thu Sep 04, 2008 6:59 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Twiggy » Mon Sep 01, 2008 11:22 pm

although i havent read any articles on this; it seems reasonable to imagine there is a slight sonic difference in the engines of all daw's

but given the amount of variables from mics to pres to converters to monitors i wouldnt call it a reason to favor pt or logic.

my two cents anyway.
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Postby Ploki » Tue Sep 02, 2008 12:23 am

uhm, on a local forum, one guy performed a test (i think it was approx. 4 .. or 8 tracks) on Nuendo4 & LP8.
the files cancelled out completely. :S
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Postby constantino101 » Tue Sep 02, 2008 5:22 am

thats interesting, thanks guys. Has anyone here directly compared logic to another d.a.w, perhaps using same outboard gear?

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Postby constantino101 » Tue Sep 02, 2008 5:25 am

Oh, and why do you consistently read about P.T's being best for audio recording, and logic better for midi? ive no doubt Logic is better for midi, however why not recording audio also??

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Postby fader8 » Tue Sep 02, 2008 6:01 am

constantino101 wrote:thats interesting, thanks guys. Has anyone here directly compared logic to another d.a.w, perhaps using same outboard gear?

Sure, many times. Once upon a time, Pro Tools TDM mix engines had a definite "signature sound" that many people didn't like. Not that it mattered as most folks still mixed on their console anyway. The newer HD systems don't suffer from this however.

constantino101 wrote:Oh, and why do you consistently read about P.T's being best for audio recording, and logic better for midi? ive no doubt Logic is better for midi, however why not recording audio also??

This has everything to do with features and nothing to do with audio quality. All DAW software captures the same data.

Try to keep in mind that Pro Tools has spent its life catering features to folks who do session recording and audio post. Logic has always been a tool for composers, and more recently sound designers and producers.

In practical terms, this means you should pick the right tool for the job, if you can afford it. If not, get by with what you have and feel lucky you can do it at all.
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Postby marcel72 » Tue Sep 02, 2008 6:29 am

constantino101 wrote:Oh, and why do you consistently read about P.T's being best for audio recording, and logic better for midi? ive no doubt Logic is better for midi, however why not recording audio also??

MC


This comment is more about functional considerations than sound. PT has recording and editing features (playlists, overlapping groups, Audio Suite, BD and other macros) that make it desirable for working on audio.

IME the quality and sound of A/D/A conversion has much more of an impact on the final result than the sonics of the mix engine. As fader8 says, they're all pretty good these days anyways. It's like the difference between different brands of tape...
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Postby Ashermusic » Tue Sep 02, 2008 6:32 am

Here is my take on this. Although there is indeed a difference in summing algos, it is tiny compared to other factors such as hardware, plug-ins, pan laws, etc..

If you were to bring i.e. 24 audio tracks into any DAW like Logic, PT, DP, Cubase,etc., all using the same hardware, set them all to unity gain, no panning, and set the 2 buss to -6 dB and bounce, then burn the bounces on a CD, you would be very hard-pressed to hear any significant difference.

It is the least important reason to choose a DAW.
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Postby constantino101 » Tue Sep 02, 2008 8:01 am

thanks guys, that certainly makes sense.

I do seem to be having much more sibilance in my vocal recordings than when I used cubase sx3 before (I prefer logic's work flow by far) but never the less, I am at a loss since its the same interface and mic, just different d.a.w.

Ashermusic-the comment about importing the same tracks into different d.a.w's and hearing minimal difference-does this apply to actually recording audio into them too-with the identical hardware set up?

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Postby Ploki » Tue Sep 02, 2008 11:28 pm

importing same tracks at the same sample rate in different daws has no impact.

the thing that had impact on your recording is different acoustics and probably preamp settings :)
cheers

pt is best for audio mixing because of the [gloomyghostvoice=on] 48 bit internal processing [gloomyghostvoice=off]

but that shouldn affect your sibilances not a bit.
be sure that you have the same samplerate and bit depth, because digital audio is prone to crappy hifreq response
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Postby David » Tue Sep 02, 2008 11:33 pm

It's been said before, but I think it's important to say it again: a DAW has strictly ZERO influence on the audio it records. When recording audio, a DAW takes the stream of zeros and ones coming from the audio interface and puts them in an audio file. That's it! So 00101 is going to be 00101 whether you use Cubase, Fruity Loops, PTLE, PT TDM, Logic or whatever else you wish.

Where DAWs differ is in summing. When you start mixing different audio files into one stereo audio output (or file), then the DAW has to make calculations using an audio engine. Different audio engines use different ways to calculate the summing, and yield different results - which is why you get a different sound.
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Postby lagerfeldt » Wed Sep 03, 2008 3:20 am

David wrote:So 00101 is going to be 00101 whether you use Cubase, Fruity Loops, PTLE, PT TDM, Logic or whatever else you wish.

Except of course the 00101 sounds better in Logic Pro than PoorTools LE because with the latter you're a slave to the Digi 003. And the Digi 003 records 00101 as 00001 instead because it has inferior A/D compared to the choices available for Logic Pro. ;-)

Sorry, but I can't help myself.

And summing 32 files in Logic Pro, Cubase and ProTools HD sounds 99,99% identical, despite two having 32 bit float and the other having 48 bit fixed.

I argue that many other factors determine the final result and that this discussion is over. Now. The End.
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Postby Ashermusic » Wed Sep 03, 2008 6:25 am

David wrote:It's been said before, but I think it's important to say it again: a DAW has strictly ZERO influence on the audio it records. When recording audio, a DAW takes the stream of zeros and ones coming from the audio interface and puts them in an audio file. That's it! So 00101 is going to be 00101 whether you use Cubase, Fruity Loops, PTLE, PT TDM, Logic or whatever else you wish.

Where DAWs differ is in summing. When you start mixing different audio files into one stereo audio output (or file), then the DAW has to make calculations using an audio engine. Different audio engines use different ways to calculate the summing, and yield different results - which is why you get a different sound.


Re: paragraph 1, absolutely correct.

Re: paragraph 2, yes, but even this difference is minimal compared to other factors.

The bottom line is that one should not buy a DAW based on someone's claim that "it just sounds better."
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Postby Ploki » Wed Sep 03, 2008 7:38 am

they make plugins to color the sound :) DAWs are imo trying to be as clean as possible in order to provide maximum flexibility.
it would be dumb to color with daw
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Postby lagerfeldt » Wed Sep 03, 2008 8:09 am

I think the average IQ on this forum is about 40% higher than Gearslutz, which the informed answers in this thread shows.

We need some more morons here to stir the pot.
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Postby Ploki » Wed Sep 03, 2008 8:29 am

i like your satire, it amuses me :)
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Postby fader8 » Wed Sep 03, 2008 8:50 am

That's it! Now we have to write a plug-in. The latest thing for your master bus! A bunch of radio buttons allowing you to select what host DAW you want your mix to sound like.

It could have a little picture of the retail box appear for each product when its selected. Just like the mic and cabinet emulators.

It actually wouldn't do anything at all, but that's a feature, right? 100% Transparency!

Heck, we could advertise 0 latency too!

I bet it would sell! :twisted:
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Postby Ploki » Wed Sep 03, 2008 9:10 am

its actually not a bad idea.
then sell it on gearslutz :P
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Postby David » Wed Sep 03, 2008 9:16 am

What a great idea! A DAW modeling plug-in. :lol:
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