I still haven't gotten to the bottom of the problem even though I know how to get around it. I have, however, made an observation and to explain, I'll describe in detail what is happening regarding the issue of clipping.
1. The LEDs that form the METER display only ever monitor the
input signal, in my case always from the player to the DEQ2496 via Toslink;
2. As many will know, CDs are not all recorded at the same level; many modern CDs are recorded 'hot' whereby their peak level is very close to 0dB over which digital clipping occurs;
3. No matter what CD I play, if the signal input to the DEQ2496 is directly routed to the output jacks, thereby bypassing the GEQ, PEQ etc modules,
no clipping occurs. However, analysis of a CD like Erasure's
Nightbird reveals that the peak level (though the meter remains virtually stationary at the peak level over time) of most if not all songs is at a staggering -0.1dB. This would be a 'hot' CD.
By comparison, playing Chris de Burgh's
Missing You reveals a peak level of -1.9dB (with the meter varying over time).
4. If the Gain Offset parameter is set to 0dB then logically the input level will equal the output level when either (a) the output signal bypasses the GEQ, PEQ etc modules or (b) the output signal does not bypass the GEQ, PEQ etc modules, but the module levels are set at 0dB, and this does indeed occur;
5. Following on from 4 above, routing the input signal through the GEQ, PEQ modules but
reducing their gain should have no effect on the input level and should not cause clipping to the output level, yet it is at this stage that clipping occurs...and is shown occurring to the input signal!
6. Clipping does not always occur. I now know that part of the problem is that with a 'hot' recorded CD, clipping is much more likely because the initial level is on the verge of clipping before you even start to make any changes. For the same but opposite reason, with a properly recorded CD clipping does not occur at all;
7. The question is: why is clipping ocurring at all? The input signal is just that; an input. When any adjustments are made in the GEQ, PEQ etc modules it is the output signal that varies, yet the LED meter clearly shows that when the GEQ, PEQ etc modules are engaged
with changes, and a 'hot' CD is playing, cliping occurs.
Doesn't make sense to me even though, as I wrote at the outset, the problem is easily solved by lowering the Gain Offset a touch in level. This has the effect of reducing the level of the output signal but, as far as I can see,
must be reducing the input level too because clipping then ceases.
Doesn't
anybody have any ideas/explanations?