What’s the Difference Between the Oxford Limiter and the Limiter in Oxford Dynamics?

Modified on Wed, 30 Jul at 4:43 PM


Both Oxford Limiter and the Limiter section in Oxford Dynamics are designed to control peak levels in your audio.
However, they are optimised for different purposes and use different approaches to metering, loudness management, and processing features.
This guide explains the differences so you can choose the right tool for the job.


1. Oxford Dynamics – Built‑In Limiter

The Limiter in Oxford Dynamics is a conventional digital peak limiter. It:

  • Prevents digital sample values from exceeding 0 dBFS.

  • Maximises level quickly and efficiently.

  • Works well for individual tracks or sources inside a mix.

Limitations:

  • Does not measure or manage true analogue peak levels (inter‑sample peaks).

  • Can allow peaks above digital full scale when converted to other formats (e.g. MP3, AAC), which may cause clipping or fizz after encoding.

  • Lacks the advanced dithering, noise‑shaping, and loudness enhancement features of the dedicated Oxford Limiter.


2. Oxford Limiter – Dedicated Mastering Limiter

The Oxford Limiter is purpose‑built for final mix and mastering work. It:

  • Uses look‑ahead processing for transparent control.

  • Offers True Peak metering (ITU‑R BS.1770 compliant) via Recon Meter mode — detects potential inter‑sample peaks before conversion.

  • Ensures consistent loudness without introducing unwanted distortion.

  • Includes Enhance processing to preserve transient detail while increasing loudness.

  • Provides four variable noise‑shaping modes for dithering control — ideal for mastering deliverables.


Key Differences — At a Glance

FeatureOxford Dynamics LimiterOxford Limiter
Processing typeConventional digital peak limitingTrue Peak look‑ahead limiting
Primary useTrack‑level limiting within a mixFinal mix bus / mastering
True Peak detection❌ No✅ Yes (Recon Meter mode)
Enhance processing❌ No✅ Yes
Advanced dithering❌ No✅ 4 noise‑shaping modes
Risk of inter‑sample peaks after conversionHigherSignificantly reduced
Optimised forInstrument/vocal tracksStereo mix/master output

Practical Usage Tips

  • Use Oxford Dynamics Limiter for controlling peaks on individual channels where simplicity and CPU efficiency are important.

  • Use Oxford Limiter on the master bus for final level control, loudness maximisation, and prevention of encoding‑related clipping.

  • For mastering work destined for streaming platforms or broadcast, True Peak limiting is strongly recommended.


Related Documentation




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