Hi mwillems. I understand what you're saying, but that's not what my question is about. My question is not about why does clip protection engage in the first place; I know why. It's about the number clip protection reports. Of course I can eliminate the need for clip protection by removing all equalizers and effects from the chain, but that's not important.
All then things you are referring to are earlier in the audio path. Volume leveling, then volume control, then equalizer, then effects, then room correction, and then at the very end, CLIP PROTECTION.
Clip Protection is the sum of all other modifications to the path, and it is ONLY the discrepancy between the reported clip protection adjustment, and the ADDITIONAL volume adjustment required to remove it, that I am concerned about.
I know perfectly well Clip Protection is engaging because equalizer, effects, and room correction are altering the peak volume (at at least some frequencies) after the volume control and volume leveling has been applied. That's working as designed. But the number reported by Clip Protection should be rational; it's supposed to represent the volume adjustment made to prevent clipping. But it does not match up.
Let me put it another way:
Volume leveling -5, volume -5, equalizer config XYZ, might equal: Clip protection -0.4db
Also, Volume leveling -14.2, volume -0, equalizer ABC, effects DEF, might equal: Clip Protection -0.4db
In both of those cases, all the specifics about the earlier parts of the audio path are irrelevant for my question. The only thing that matters is the RESULT, -0.4db. Comparing that one number, -0.4db, to a needed volume control adjustment, is simple math, because the clip protection at the end IS a whole band volume adjustment.
Here is the fact: If Clip Protection reports -0.4db, then reducing the volume control by an additional -0.5db DOES NOT PREVENT CLIP PROTECTION FROM ENGAGING. You still get something like Clip Protection -0.2db. You don't see the clip protection message not appear until you've reduced the volume by way more than -0.4db; more like -1.6db is needed.
My question is why, when Clip Protection reports -0.4db, why do I need to add an additional Volume -1.6db to prevent clip protection from engaging?
Scenario:
0. Have your standard effects and room correction activated
1. Play video clip
2. Clip Protection engages, reports volume reduction -0.4
3. Stop playback
4. Reduce MC volume control by an additional -0.5
5. Play clip again
6. Clip Protection still engages, reports volume reduction -0.3!!!
7. Iterate steps 4-6; Clip protection will report reducing but non-zero adjustments
8. Clip protection finally stops engaging when you reach volume control -1.5 or -2db
That's my question. Why do I need additional Volume -1.6 instead of additional Volume -0.4? Four times as much as reported. That's the discrepancy.
I hope I'm explaining myself clearly. Thanks for your help.