Description
BASS COMPRESSION
The Keeley Bassist Compressor provides true high-fidelity compression and limiting. Be heard and felt using performance compression by Keeley Engineering.
The Bassist Compressor is built around the exotic and extremely high fidelity THAT Corp. 4320. Β Think of it as very affordable studio-grade compressor in stomp box format! Β It uses high performance Voltage Controlled Amplifiers, on board true-RMS detector, and ultra high performance op-amps to bring you the very best quality. VCA compressors give you precise control. Β Therefore they are directly suited to bass guitars. The Keeley Bassist Compressor is both musical and very transparent. Β Where our older compressors were based on the CA3080 or the LM13700 and are perfect for single coil guitars, the new Keeley Bassist Compressor has no problems with active pre-amps and most of the hottest instrument line level signals! Β Not only can the Keeley Bassist handle astonishingly large signals, it has an incredible bandwidth of over 20 KHz and incredibly low noise. Β No detail in your bass guitarβs tone will be lost. Β The Keeley Bassist will be a sound investment in your tone, you now have rack-mount quality at your feet.
Compression and Threshold
When bass players use the Keeley Bassist Compressor they will be greeted with a sound that is more easily amplified and heard. Β Using the effect as aΒ limiting amplifierΒ saves your speakers from clipping and distortion. Β Set the Threshold to look for peaks in your signal and limit distortion from your amplifier or damage to your speakers. Β Simply watch the Threshold Indicator light to see what type of playing you want to limit, itβs that easy! Β Next set the Compression Ratio Control to determine how much squash you want when the signal is aboveΒ Threshold. Β Set Compression all of the way down for no Β (1:1) compression and use the Gain control as a boost! Β Set Compression all of the way up for an above-Threshold hard-knee limiter.
A typical soft compressor setting would be 2:1 above threshold. Β A good starting ratio for the Compression control may be 4:1 as it generally sounds good with bass guitar. Β A ratio of 5:1 or 6:1 will sound great for slap or funk-style playing. Β For synth-bass try 10:1 Compression.
Attack and Release
There is a certain figure that just sounds good as far as compression goes; and thatβs 125 dB/second. Β With feed forward compressors that use this type of true-RMS detector you use a single time constant parameter. Β The timing capacitor gives you attack and release times that are adaptive to your playing level or the signal input to the compressor. Β Bottom line: Attack and Release times vary on program content. Β Attack times are generally speaking,Β aboutΒ 100 times faster than release times.
Attack Time:Β typically 15ms for 10dB, 5ms for 20dB, 3ms for 30dB
Release Time: typically 8ms for 1dB, 40ms for 5dB, 80ms for 10dB, 160ms for 20dB, 240ms for 30dB
Specs:
Voltage Input: 9V
Current Draw: 50mA
Input Impedance 1 Meg ohm
Output Impedance: 100Β ohm
Output Voltage Gain: +30dB Boost
Bandwidth > 20kHz
Total Harmonic Distortion: 0.1%
Noise: -95dBV
Threshold Indicator: Dual LEDΒ
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