sedit1 said:
Hi!
I would love to build a stereo sontec and I would like to use it for mastering duties. I'm no mastering engineer but many of my clients (smaller bands) wants me to master their demos/ep's so I would like to have a decent eq for that job.
The stepped version would of course be the better option but it seems like too much work to me at this time.
Do you think that normal pot version would be suitable for mastering duties/how many of you guys are using the normal version for mastering?
Thanks!
Hi!
congratulations! very good idea. Igor's sontec is unquestionable the best diy mastering eq out there! incredible value for money.
i finished the sontec around 2 weeks ago and this unit has greatly enriched my existing gear arsenal!
yes! this unit works brilliantly for mastering!
i'm aware of eq techniques for mastering, but in this case i have to say: no matter what you do with this eq, which knob in which direction: it simply sounds so much better than before!
there may certainly different opinions on the stepped version out there, in my opinion: the non-stepped version is totally sufficient for mastering. the stepped version would - as you already assumed - mean a substantial increase on your diy efforts!
it maybe a nice to have but for me (i use to evaluate sound-wise, only): not justifying the extra effort (if you realize what other remarkable diy adventures are also currently available, also from Igor: the 2254, CRM kit, 33609, mnats 1176, even a u47 clone, 1084 etc. pp...) - my advice: save resources you do not really need to spend on comfort that add only little value on your goal no. 1: SOUND
just do it like this: the midrange is the key! in order to identify disturbihng frequencies cut the lows and highs off.
then boost through the midrange and if you found the poor dog, just make a cut of ca. 3db. you can do this with all 3 midrange knobs. if you are done with the midrange, just add a lil air and balls and there we go.
best wishes.