Distortion Flashcards
What is impedance mismatching?
When the impedance of an output signal produces a signal that has a high impedance value compared with the impedance value of a mic input
A high impedance results in a distorted sound on an input not designed to accept high impedance signals. The signal is usually distorted and contains unwanted noise
What is clipping?
The type of distortion most common when overdriving an input or output. It occurs when the signal goes above of the maximum level of a capacity, generally 0dBFS
When the signal clips, the parts of the signal above 0dBFS are lost.
In a DAW, the parts of the signal above distortion threshold will be squashed, clipping the waveform, turning a sine wave into a harsh square wave
What is Truncation distortion?
Caused by dropping bits when playing or rendering an audio signal that can produce a low level distorted signal
What is tape saturation?
- Lacks warmth of analogue technology
- When magnetic tape is overloaded by a signal, it produces a rich, harmonically-driven distortion
- Can be re-produced in DAWs with plug-ins
What is fuzz?
- A style of distortion that harks back to early guitar amps, especially broken ones
- It was discovered that broken amps could sound pretty interesting and fuzz pedals were soon created
- Fuzz created by hard clipping analog transistors
- Has been used by hard rock and lo-fi indie bands
- Can make an overly muddy sound that needs a low-cut or shelf filter
What is a fundamental tone?
- The pitch of a tone is determined by its fundamental, the loudest and lowest frequency in a waveform
- If the fundamental is 100hz, the next wave that forms will be 200hz. This is the first overtone in relation to the original fundamental or the second harmonic
What is harmonic distortion?
- Do not add to the harmonics surrounding the fundamental
- The total harmonic distortion indicates the difference between the harmonics present in the outgoing signal produced by an amp compared to the pure incoming signal
What is overdrive?
- A type of analog style soft clipping that doesn’t add many extra harmonics, but drive the signal
- Replicate the effect of running a signal through an analogue tube amp. Great for adding thickness but not fundamentally changing too much of the timbre
What is non-harmonic distortion?
- Similar to clipping and is the result of additional frequencies being added to the signal that aren’t multiples of the fundamental tone.
- The non-harmonic distortion of an over-driven solid state amp is a part of the heavy metal sound
What is linear distortion?
- A change in amplitude or phase with no new frequencies added
- Signal isn’t fundamentally altered
- Doesn’t colour the sound
- Changes in the wave amplitude or phase can lead to cancellation of certain frequencies or increase volume levels for others.
What is non-linear distortion?
- Non-linear distortion occurs when new frequency components are generated
- Frequencies present in the outgoing sound that are not from the original audio are elements of distortion
- All amps produce slight non-linear distortion
- Diodes, transistors and amps will all contribute to slight distortions
What is bitcrushing?
- The higher the bits the more information the audio can contain
- Once bits start dropping from 16, there will be very audible differences
- Downsampling is similar to bitcruchung but is reducing the sample rate instead of the bit depth