Outboard-EQ Help

Detector modes

> The Dynamic EQ on every band can use one of four detector algorithms. Each watches the signal differently and lands the gain reduction with a different character.

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The Dynamic EQ on every band can use one of four detector algorithms. Each watches the signal differently and lands the gain reduction with a different character.

Modes

Peak

Feed-forward branching one-pole detector. Reacts to the instantaneous peak of the band-passed signal and lets the gain change happen fast. Surgical — best for de-essing, harsh-transient taming, mouth-noise control. Switch to Peak when you want the band to nail one sound and not the surrounding energy.

RMS

Windowed mean-square with classic compressor ballistics. Tracks the energy of the band rather than the peaks, so it ignores brief transients and reacts to sustained tone. Musical — best for drum-bus glue, vocal-bus compression, smoothing the body of a mix without ducking the snare.

Adaptive

Bipolar A/B-flipped adaptive-chase detector. Asymmetric and program-dependent: the chase speed itself reacts to the input, so the detector "leans into" loud passages and lets quiet passages bloom. Characterful — best for material that benefits from a hardware-like, slightly unpredictable hand on the gain. Try it on busses where you want movement, not control.

Spectral

Routes the band through the shared STFT engine for Soothe2-style per-bin resonance suppression. The time-domain detector is skipped entirely — the band's gain map is built in the frequency domain, and the spectral parameters (Selectivity, Ratio, Knee, Density, Mask) take over. Frequency-selective — best for resonance suppression that adapts to the program (resonances move, the detector follows them). See Spectral dynamics for the dedicated parameters.

Mode switching

Switching detector mode is always glitch-free: a 20 ms equal-gain crossfade in the dB domain bridges the old and new detector output, so you can A/B detectors live on a playing track without any clicks or pumping artefacts.

Tips

  • If you don't know which mode to pick, leave it on Peak — every legacy preset starts there.
  • Adaptive mode pairs well with the per-band character stages (Op-Amp, Density). It sounds at home in a colored chain.
  • Spectral is more expensive than the time-domain modes; the STFT engine only runs while at least one band is set to Spectral. Stack as many Spectral bands as you like — they all share the same engine.

See also

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