Brass waveforms are asymmetrical... The air pressure emanating from the annular mouthpiece is pretty much a broadly shaped needle pulse... The lips buzz against the mouthpiece which modulates an exhaled breath - there's not much negative excursion.
Any part of the system that acts non-linearly in the presence of that offset will go nuts.
I believe (haven't proved) that since the signature sound of condenser mics is strongly tied to their resonance/time-freq behavior coupled with the asymmetrical pull of the backplate on the diaphragm may be make them resonate more intensely when excited by an offset signal like horns. Whereas ribbons are more symmetrically damped with a lower freq resonance point. Hence the preference for 44s and 77s (and Beyer M130s in my personal preference ).
Why the subsequent damage is maybe polarized electrolytics trying to force the signal to be symettrical around zero? Guessing/reaching there.
Please pardon the misspellings and occassional insane word substitution I'm on an iPhone
> On Sep 30, 2014, at 10:50 AM, "John K. Chester" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> At 10:07 AM 9/30/2014, Bruce Whisler wrote:
>> I am working with an old tape recording that has several instances of distortion that sound like clipping. When I view the waveform in my DAW, I see two things that are puzzling:
>>
>> 1. The waveform in the distorted areas is not at a higher amplitude than other undistorted sections.
>>
>> 2. The waveform amplitude appears to be attenuated on the negative side of the waveform, but not on the positive side.
>>
>> The distorted sections usually last only about a second and do coincide with loud high notes from a trumpet soloist. The recordings are from live performances in the 1970s.
>>
>> Any thoughts on what I am dealing with?
>
> The first thought that comes to my mind is slew rate limiting (aka transient intermodulation distortion). For those who don't know what slew rate limiting is, good explanation here:
> http://ethanwiner.com/slew_rate.htm
> It sounds like distortion, but reduces the waveform amplitude of high level high frequency components compared to lower frequencies, so the distorted waveform looks quite different from simple clipping. Some audio equipment built in the 1970's used early IC op amps which had slew rate too slow for audio.
>
> Trumpet is a very asymmetrical waveform. When you look at undistorted sections of the trumpet waveform, are the fastest-moving portions on the negative side, or the positive side? If negative, that supports this theory. If positive, this theory is almost certainly wrong.
>
>> I have Izotope RX 3 Advanced, and have had little success in repairing this particular problem with the Declip, Decrackle, or Declick modules.
>
> I've never tried to use digital tools to repair slew rate limiting, but it doesn't surprise me that those tools won't do it.
>
> -- John Chester
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