When should you use a limiter instead of a compressor?

Essentially, a compressor compresses the dynamic (volume) range of the track. A limiter on the other hand limits the amount of a signal passing through. Both use a user dialed in volume output cap (known as the threshold) but instead of taking the volume overage and compressing it, a limiter just completely removes it.
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When should I use limiter plugin?

Limiters can be used in any situation where you need to cap the intensity of a signal at a defined level. For example, they can work well on percussion in situations where some hits are much louder than others and need to be tightly controlled.
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For what purpose the compressors and limiters are used?

Compressors and limiters are used to reduce dynamic range — the span between the softest and loudest sounds. Using compression can make your tracks sound more polished by controlling maximum levels and maintaining higher average loudness.
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Why would you use a limiter?

What is a limiter? A limiter, however, is usually used for one reason: to catch the loudest moments of a source, bringing them down in a way that a) protects against unwanted distortion, and b) maintains the integrity of the mix's overall balance/color.
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At what ratio does a compressor become a limiter?

Typically, a compressor is being used as a limiter when its ratio is set to 20:1 or higher. That means that the threshold essentially becomes the “limit” of the volume level. This often results in “blocked off” sound waves, as the peaks of a wave are essentially shaved off into a flat line.
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Limiter vs Compressor: What You Need to Know (Easy) | musicianonamission.com - Mix School #34



Should you always use a limiter on the Master?

Give yourself the “rule” that you will never put a limiter on your master fader while you are still mixing and you will go far. Rely solely on compression, EQ, and a your other bag of tools on a track by track basis to get things working nicely. If you limit while you mix, you will end up fighting with the limiter.
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Should I put a limiter on every track?

It probably isn't necessary, but you can put a limiter on as many tracks as you like. Instruments like synths and distorted guitars may already have a very small dynamic range so in my experience, there's really no point in limiting them.
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Where do you put the limiter on a chain?

Where do you put the limiter on a chain? A limiter should be the last step within your mastering chain. You can think of a limiter as an ultra-powerful compressor. Therefore, a limiter should be used sparingly so that your mix is amplified, but still dynamic.
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What's the difference between compression and limiting?

Essentially, a compressor compresses the dynamic (volume) range of the track. A limiter on the other hand limits the amount of a signal passing through. Both use a user dialed in volume output cap (known as the threshold) but instead of taking the volume overage and compressing it, a limiter just completely removes it.
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Should I record vocals with a limiter?

If you're dealing with several vocal layers, use a limiter to tame sections of the song where additional harmonies and backing vocals start to stack up and become too loud. A limiter with a very slow release time can allow you to effectively “duck” these sections down without making much of a fuss.
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How much is too much limiting?

The more gain reduction you have, the more you'll hear the artifacts of your limiter. In a good master, you don't want to hear the limiter working; therefore, ideally the gain reduction limit you have on the limiter should be no more than 2.5 dB.
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How much headroom should I leave for mastering?

Headroom for Mastering is the amount of space (in dB) a mixing engineer will leave for a mastering engineer to properly process and alter an audio signal. Typically, leaving 3 – 6dB of headroom will be enough room for a mastering engineer to master a track.
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What is the difference between a limiter and a maximizer?

While a limiter simply knocks down or chops off the loudest peaks, a maximizer increases the loudness of a track and at the same time sets a ceiling for its peak level to prevent clipping. A limiter's job is to set a ceiling while the maximizer pushes the music up to the ceiling.
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Does a limiter and a compressor affect signal the same way?

A limiter vs compressor is really just a different flavor of the same thing. Limiters turn down the signal way more heavily and are mostly employed to keep a mix or instrument at one solid level with no overages above a set output level.
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How do you use limiters in mixing?

These very fast peaks can typically be an issue when using a compressor to fatten a submix/stem, full mix, or master. The solution is to add a limiter to the signal chain following the compressor. Set the limiter's attack time (if it has one) to its fastest setting, and a release time of 5ms or less.
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What is the difference between a compressor sustainer and a compressor limiter?

The sustainer type usually has sustain & attack knobs; The limiter type usually has threshold, ratio, attack, & release knobs. From what I read, the sustainer type increase the signal as it decays, so the volume is increased as the actual signal actually gets quieter - hence the longer sustain.
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Should I compress or limit first?

The main rule is there are no rules and you should use your ears. By limiting you mean peak-limiting? I'd compress first, get the signal level up in overall loudness and get the fat big mix you want. Then, you maynot even need to peak-limit.
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Which comes first compression or EQ?

Each position, EQ pre (before) or EQ post (after) compression produces a distinctly different sound, a different tonal quality, and coloration. As a rule, using EQ in front of your compressor produces a warmer, rounder tone, while using EQ after your compressor produces a cleaner, clearer sound.
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What order should plugins be in?

Sequence ultimately does matter because each plugin will affect how the next one down the line behaves. Place a distortion before a chorus and you're going to get a lush distortion. Place it after the chorus and you're going to get an entirely different effect. This is the same for delays, reverbs, EQ and compressors.
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How do you master a limiter?

To set a limiter, first identify the loudest section of a song. This is the part where the limiter will react most drastically. It is best to check for distortion in this area. Once you've found the loudest part of the song, insert a limiter of your choice on your master bus and listen to your recording.
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How much compression do you need for mastering?

Here are some general guidelines if you want to use compression while mastering: Start your ratio at 1.25:1 or 1.5:1. Going past a ratio of more than 2:1 is not recommended. Set your threshold pretty high so that you're getting 2 dB of gain reduction at most.
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What should my mix peak at before mastering?

How Loud Should My Track Be Before Mastering? If you want to send your mix off to get mastered, you should aim for around -6dB Peak, and anywhere from -23 dBFS RMS or LUFS to -18 dBFS RMS or LUFS average. That's the quick answer, but as usual, it's a bit more nuanced than that.
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What dB to send for mastering?

Most mastering engineers recommend having the loudest part of a mix at –5 dB from absolute '0' dBFS. This means you should have the loudest section of the mix 5 dB lower before the peak level of '0'. It is recommended to not go over '0' dBFS on the master fader or individual tracks in the mix.
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