User`s manual

10 / LM6 Radar Loudness Meter
which includes dialog, of course. If you wish to measure dialog, it’s recommended to
do a manual spot check of a program or a film. Find 10-30 seconds of regular dialog
andmeasureitwithLM6/LM2.Wheredialogmaybesoft,regularorloud,andshiftby
morethan15dBinsideafilm,regulardialogtendstobelessambiguousandmore
consistent across a program.
For compatibility with a proprietary measure such as Dolby LM100, only some
ofthesemetersareupdatedtouseITU-RBS.1770andLeq(K)whileothers
arelockedatLeq(A).ThesoftwareversionofLM100shouldbe1.3.1.5or
higherinorderforittocomplywithBS.1770,andtohaveitsaverage
loudnessreadingbecompatiblewithCenterofGravityinLM5orProgramLoudness
inLM6.Evenusedjustonspeech,Leq(A)isnotapreciseapproximationtoperceived
loudness,sopleaseupdatetheunittoBS.1770toobtainsimilarreadingsand
predictable results.
TomeasuredialogwithLM6thesamewayDolbyLM100issometimesused,solo
the Center channel during a spot check to momentarily disable the channel weighting
specifiedinBS.1770,ifyou’reworkingona5.1stem.
Universal Descriptors and AC3 Meta-data
The “Dialnorm” parameter in AC3 meta-data should indicate the average loudness
of a program. Basic dynamic range and level control that rely on this parameter
may take place in the consumer’s receiver. Therefore, its value should not be far off
target, or the consumer results become highly unpredictable.
ProgramLoudnessinLM6isdirectlycompatiblewithDialnorminAC3.Most
broadcast stations work with a fixed dialnorm setting, for instance –23 LUFS. This
would be the Program Loudness target level for any program.
If your station is more music than speech, better inter- channel leveling may be
obtained with dialnorm permanently set 1 or 2 LU lower than the Program Loudness
target level.
True-peak meters
ThepeakmetersofLM6/LM2displaytrue-peakasspecifiedinITU-RBS.1770.
True-peak meters give a better indication of headroom and risk of distortion in
dowstream equipment such as sample rate converters, data reduction systems and
consumer electronics than digital sample meters used e.g. in CD mastering. Note that
the standard level meters in most digital workstations and mixers are only sample
peak(FinalCut,Avid,ProTools,Yamahaetc.),andshouldonlybeusedasarough
guideline of the headroom.
Note that the meter scale is extended above 0 dBFS. Most consumer equipment
distorts if you see readings above 0. It’s not a problem to have true-peak level going
to-1dBFSinproduction,butlegacyplatforms(analog,NICAMetc.)andsome
data-reduction codecs may distort unless true-peak level is kept lower. With Dolby
AC3 and with low bitrate codecs, -3 dBFS should be considered the limit, while
legacy platforms requiring emphasis may need even further restriction. Like described
in EBU R128, it’s recommended to make full use of the headroom with true-peaks
going to -1 dBFS in production, and to only restrict peak level further during
distribution/transmission.