[Because maxing out the quality setting doesn't always result in a difference that is actually noticeable. Some of these settings are better theoretically but they make little difference in practice. Use your ears to determine if it makes sense to max them out or not.
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That makes sense, thanks
It depends! On what you're trying to achieve, how your station sounds, how you want it to sound, how your taste (and station) develops over time. Again... use your ears. If it sounds right, there is no point in changing anything. But in my case I tend to start hearing some new annoying thing every once in a while which makes me dive back into the settings.
Once I find the most troublesome songs, I processed them, to see if I could hear any strange artifacts, there are quite a few songs that will do that. I'll be adding some other tracks and see what they sound like on my Audio Test Station, and see what the response is, before committing to processing my files, I have a slow PC for steaming and DJ work, so I can't run Stereo Tool on it, it's only a Pentium Silver N5030 processor, 8GB RAM but it sounds good if I do the processing first, My Mixer I have has some a few microphone compressors and special effects built in. So there is little reason to use Stereo Tool in a live session, I suppose I could use it for the Limiter, which would consume low CPU usage if configured for limited use.
Because your content keeps changing, probably. Maybe less so if you don't have live content (like a DJ talking). But still, if you change some cuepoint on a track you don't want to have to re-process it. And you don't have any freedom anymore to change anything to your processing (without having to re-process *all* your files). And you don't want to have clipping on a transition between your nicely processed tracks.
I understand if your doing Live content or people (DJ) talking that would be the time to use Stereo tool in real time, but I was referring to recorded music. I would think that during a Live DJ when talking the processing would not be as much, a little EQ and compression and noise gate, limiter would do the trick, I would think that the other features like the bass EQ, Declipper, Stereo effects would not be needed at all, unless your doing like sound effects with a VST or something.
Transitioning between tracks are usually done with the playout software so there is no spikes from that, the software has a limiter so that helps with clipping issues.
Thanks for the info.