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Old 4th February 2008   #18
hackenslash
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: People's Republic Of Mancunia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lupo View Post
Very quick and dirty: RMS is a sort of average and peak is the top level. RMS corresponds better with what we hear as humans. We don't actually hear the peak level, we hear a sort of average power.

RMS means to take the root of the mean and square it. This gives a sligthly different result than to take an average or mean in the usual way.


Not so easy, but hopefully useful too:

With a sine wave seen as a circle, the RMS is exactly at 45 degrees, halfway to the top.



This pic is from my website and shows the relation between the circle and a sinewave. At 45 degrees, the sine value is .707. This is also the amplitude value of the resultant waveform. .707 may seem like an odd number, but it's actually -3dB. It's also half the square root of two, which makes utterly sense if you look at it geometrically.

In comparison, a square wave have an RMS power of -6dB compared to the peak, noise is around -12dB. Music is naturally somewhere between -14 and -20. Until loudness mastering took off, that is. In these days, music resembles square waves more than music..


Andreas
This was pointed out to me by Dreamkeeper on KVR. I overlooked it. The original formula for RMS is incorrect. The correct formula is the square root of the mean of the squares of the values.

Still, great thread.
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