The de-esser in DP24 SD

Saxomohawh

Veteran
Joined
Jul 9, 2016
Messages
104
Karma
38
Gear owned
Dp 24 sd
Anyone had any success with the de-esser? I have technically got it working but it doesn't cut down my "s-es". I have recorded a track with a lot of s-sounds which I have routed out to effect send and then back to another input with the de-esser activated. I listen to only the recording track. If I turn the depth quite high I can hear it is working, but it doesn't cut down my sibilances much. It mostly kills the sound. I try sweeping the frequency but it doesn't really make any difference at all. Now it only goes up to 4 kHz, so maybe my voice has sibilances higher than that? Any experiences on this?
 
There's a few experts around here, but I'm not one of them. I haven't used the de-esser much, preferring the compressor or noise reducer. I have found that putting up a mesh in front of the microphone, and standing back a bit helps reduce unwanted noise from my poor singing technique. Not sure if this is a helpful answer for you, but it's how I cope with it.
 
I have done some further experimenting. Recorded sssssssssssssss i Audicity (free audio software) and made a frequency plot. It shows that there are two peaks for my "s", one at 5240 Hz and one at 6100 Hz. So clearly out of range for the Tascam de-esser. Maybe interesting to know for someone out there.
 
A agree with Mollie, that prevention is better than cure, and always use a pop screen for vocals. I don't usually need to de-ess, but if I did, and the preset did not work to expectations, I would set the equaliser in the vocal channel to a fairly narrow mid Q and say +6dB and sweep across the frequency band to find the frequencies (there may be more than one) at which the artefact is greatly increased. Then take the +4 down to -6 or -10dB. Let your ear be the judge.

Iain
 
I wish I was technically minded like that, but I'm an old fart and do thing old school. I'm sure there is a lot to be gained by examining frequencies and things like that, and learning to understand it all.
I've had some great results from my dp24, but it's just a cheap recorder, and perhaps not capable of some of the expectations some people have.
keep us up to date with your experiments.
 

New posts

New threads

Members online

No members online now.