Dualband AGC is available now.
Winamp DSP plugin:
http://www.stereotool.com/download/dsp_ ... BETA3A.exe
Stand alone version:
http://www.stereotool.com/download/ster ... BETA3A.exe
VST version:
http://www.stereotool.com/download/vst_ ... BETA3A.dll
In the AGC (Pre Limiter) window you can switch between 1 or 2 bands (2 uses a bit more CPU power).
If 2 bands are used, for the first band the total signal is used (equal to the 1-band processing)
For band 2 the frequencies above 200 Hz are used. If there are no lows in the signal, the two are identical.
My experience so far is that in general, to get similar high frequency levels as when using a single band, the maximum value for band 2 must be set to about 70% of that of band 1. This leads to about 3 dB LOWER volume levels if there are no lows, but slightly higher levels when there are a lot of lows. Overall it sounds far more constant.
I've also added a slider to control the maximum volume before remaining peaks are removed, it's set to 200% by default, but for more aggressive up/down speed settings you might need higher values.
If you want:
- Natural, constant sound: Use 2 bands
- Pumping bass: Use 1 band, set up/down speed a lot higher, increase "Remove peaks above" so there's (almost) no black parts in the output bars. (Black parts = 'remove remaining peaks' is active. This is bad because it drops the volume already _before_ a loud peaks starts, which can sound really annoying. So it should only occur occasionally, for example at the start of a new track after silence.)
Edit: Just noticed: Under certain conditions, the highs can get really a lot louder than the lows. That sounds really bad. So just like for the old dualband pre-limiter, I'll have to lock the maximum amplification of the highs to that of the lows to make sure it doesn't get too much higher.