British Audio Engineering Now Shipping 10DC Compressor/Limiter
Three of the sweetest words in sonics come together in the name of the company British Audio Engineering. A.K.A., BAE, the company announced that it has begun shipping is new 10DC Compressor/Limiter, the latest addition to the company’s line of Class A series outboard gear.
Available for a street price of $1,600, the fully Class A The 10DC features a transformer coupled, all-discrete circuitry that is sonically familiar to the BAE Class A line of gear.
The unit features gold-plated stepped Elma rotary switches for every control, a reverse UK-style analogue meter, and the trademark Marconi knobs for ease of use and repeatability. Independent circuitry for compressor and limiter allows use of one or both for greater control, along with a true bypass. Additionally, the units are stereo-linkable as two single-channel units.
The BAE 10DC is housed in a steel chassis using the same remote supply as other BAE units.
Here’s more about the newest hardware available, straight from BAE:
“BAE’s new 10DC is completely hand-built, including the circuit board that uses no computer surface-mount components. Unlike comparable vintage or new copies with Class AB amps, the new BAE 10DC features a purely discrete Class A amplifier, yielding desirable sonic colouration. Whereas vintage designs were primarily built for analog tape machines with +4 to +8 dBu range, the new 10DC provides greater headroom and increased gain to accommodate today’s high dBu levels, typically in the +15 dBu range.
When dealing with digital levels, comparable compressor/limiters are already compressing at the initial threshold level. Rather than starting at +10 dBu, the 10DC starts at +16 dBu, making it ideal for tracking of vocals and instruments going into ProTools. All switches are on the front panel and are stepped in clickable detents for easy recall of settings. Conversely, the 10DC’s elevated headroom makes it ideal in the mixdown mode coming out of ProTools.
In addition, the 10DC features a variable attack time, unlike comparable compressor limiters. Fast attack times can vary from 2 to 4 milliseconds, but can be slowed down to 80 milliseconds. As an example, the 10DC gets that snap of the snare drum while allowing the drums to breathe.
* Class A output transformer for desirable colouration
* Increased headroom and range for today’s digital levels
* Variable attack time
BAE is known worldwide for its flagship line of classic microphone pre-amps, faithful to the original Class A discrete audio circuit designs of the 1960s and ’70s.”