Vintage Drive
Vintage Drive
Vintage Drive
While the days of -10dBV Unbalanced connections on audio interfaces are largely behind us,
different audio Interfaces have different (or selectable) output levels, most often 0dBU = -18dBFS, -
20dBFS, -22dBFS. This could be stated alternatively to say
“When an analogue signal reaches 0dBFS it is +18dBU in
level (or +20, +22 etc). Analogue equipment typically has
the capacity to handle hotter levels than this before the
circuit starts to distort so lining up the output of your audio
interface with the Input Trim of Fusion allows you to dial in
an appropriate amount of “crunch” while still keeping
headroom – Fusion happily can handle signals >27dBu
without problems.
We start our signal into the Fusion super-clean, but we then get the opportunity to dirty it up a bit.
Vintage Drive
The first colouration circuit we’re going to look at is the Vintage Drive. This is a brand new design, it’s
not the VHD mic pre circuit. To understand what it does
we’d like to take you through some gentle theory about
how amplifiers hard clip and soft clip. Here is a diagram
that shows the operating range of an ‘ideal’ amplifier
circuit. The black line shows a circuit that is completely
linear (in other words it’s completely transparent) right
until it reaches the maximum and minimum operating
levels (the red lines), at which point it ‘hard clips’. This
will give you lots of distortion. So in real words, we start
off clean, add more gain and stay just as clean, dial in more gain and I’m still clean, dial in more gain
and it’s all crap.
However, what we do with vintage drive is a bit of a half-way house; we include some of this ‘non-
linear’ region in the operating range – enough so that we
get a really nice soft clipping affect as we start to drive it,
but not so much that it hard clips. The operating range of
the unit is just less than the hard clip point. It is only in the
most unlikely of circumstances that you can cross this
virtual line and move in to hard clipping in the Vintage Drive
circuit. However by that point you will certainly be hearing
it! This is what gives Fusion it’s first injection of analogue
mojo.
This helps get the balance of soft clipping right, and most importantly ‘variable’. However too many
variables make something slow to use. We wanted Fusion to be fast to dial sounds in, the opposite
of plug-ins if you will. To do this we had to restrict some of the accessible variables in the circuit and
that meant we had to dial them in for you in ways that would give the most useable range of effect
over the most sensible range of gains. As such there were a number of tweakable parameters under
the hood of Vintage Drive in the prototype stages while we, and a core group of mix engineers, sat in
on a number of listening tests to give opinions about what the “magic settings” were.
The user adjustable bits of the circuit have two controls; the Drive which controls the amount of
colour we’re adding, and the Density which adjusts the tone.
Vintage Drive adds a bit of gain to the overall mix when switched in, so it’s important to use the
output trim and the master bypass to get roughly the same metering level. We’re confident in the
sonic ability of vintage drive, so your customer should hear an improvement when switching Fusion
in and out of circuit, without a jump in level. We recommend you should use the master bypass for
demonstrating Vintage drive, not the ‘in’ switch.