Mastering

1178 Mastering Stereo Peak Limiter

The mastering version keeps the 1178 sound direction but adds finer control, easier recall, and tighter channel matching for bus and mastering work.

FET Peak Limiter 21-Step Controls 0.1 dB Match Recall-Friendly Mastering Bus
1178 Mastering Stereo Peak Limiter hero view

Why It Matters

Four things that define the 1178 Mastering version

Same 1178 Direction

The sales notes frame it as sharing the same sound direction as the standard 1178 rather than becoming a different compressor.

Finer Control

The mastering version is positioned for smaller, more deliberate moves instead of broad effect-first compression.

Channel Matching

Internal notes describe channels matched to 0.1 dB, which matters when stereo image stability is critical.

Recall-Ready Workflow

The mastering version adds 21-step precision controls on all eight knobs so settings can be repeated more confidently.

Workflow Reference

Think recallable peak control first, clone nostalgia second

Panel reference
The mastering version matters because it keeps the fast FET attitude while making stepped recall and tighter matching realistic for revision-heavy stereo work.
  • Stepped Controls The mastering version is about repeatability and fine revision work, not just about being more expensive.
  • Matched Stereo Behavior Channel matching matters more here because the expected job includes mix and mastering bus use.
  • Fast FET Timing Use attack and release as tone and movement controls, not only as technical settings.

Quick Start

How to start without turning the mastering version into a blunt limiter

  • 1
    Begin with modest gain reduction and decide whether the bus needs control, excitement, or both.
  • 2
    Use the stepped controls to compare small changes methodically instead of chasing the sound by guesswork.
  • 3
    Leave enough attack to preserve life if the mix starts feeling flat too quickly.
  • 4
    If the release starts pumping the ambience back up, slow it down before assuming the ratio is wrong.
  • 5
    Capture the stepped positions as soon as the bus print is approved, because recall is a core reason this version exists.
Start simple, listen in context, and save only the settings you would actually want to recall.

Working Uses

Where owners usually find the mastering version paying off

Mix Bus Peak Control

Useful when the stereo bus needs fast FET shape without losing the ability to recall settings cleanly.

Mastering Revisions

A stronger fit than the standard version when exact repeatability is part of the daily workflow.

Controlled Excitement

Works when the bus should feel more alive, not just quieter in the peaks.

Stereo Decision Making

Best used when left/right stability and repeatable settings matter as much as the compression tone itself.

Working Notes

Notes that help the mastering version stay disciplined

Version Control Is Part Of The Job

Mastering moves that feel tiny in the moment become important later only if the version notes are specific and repeatable.

Small Gain Reduction Usually Wins

If the meter looks exciting but the song shrinks, the unit is probably doing more than the master really needed.

Stereo Confidence Beats Stereo Drama

On mastering work, linked behaviour is often more valuable than clever image manipulation unless the problem is genuinely channel-specific.

Timing Is A Tone Choice Too

Attack and release do not stop mattering just because the moves are smaller. They still decide whether the master breathes or hardens.

Context First, Numbers Second

Recall notes should mention source version, level target, and what changed in the chain, not only control settings.

Approval Passes Need Plain Language

The best mastering notes usually describe the result in words a client or future-you can understand quickly.

Specs

Key Specs

Frequency Response
20Hz to 40kHz, +/-0.5dB typical (compressor and SFE bypassed, unloaded)
Maximum Output Level
+27dBu typical (compressor and SFE bypassed, unloaded)
THD+N
20Hz: <0.15% typical · 1kHz: <0.025% typical · 20kHz: <0.0075% typical at +20dBu
Threshold
-58dBu to +28dBu
Ratio
4:1, 8:1, 12:1, 20:1
Blend
0% to 100% compressor
Attack
20 microseconds to 800 microseconds
Release
50ms to 1.1s
Power Consumption
50 Watts max
Fuse
5 x 20mm 2A, fast acting, glass
Noise Floor
22Hz to 20kHz · SNR -86.3dBV
Voltage Selector
110V, 220V
Product Dimensions
3.5'' (8.8 cm) x 1'7.1'' (48.4 cm) x 10.8'' (27.4 cm)
Shipping Dimensions
8.8'' (22.3 cm) x 1'10.9'' (58.2 cm) x 1'5.9'' (45.4 cm)
Shipping Weight
20.9lbs (9.5kg)
Mastering Notes
21 steps on all 8 knobs · channels hand-matched to 0.1dB accuracy
Last Updated
22/09/2024

Owner FAQ

Questions that usually come up once recall becomes part of the job

Difference What is the practical reason to choose the mastering version?

The practical reason is recall and tighter stereo consistency. It is for workflows where exact repeatability matters, not only for collecting another flavor of 1178.

It is the version you reach for when revisions and approved recalls are part of the actual job.

Attack Why did the mix go flat when I set the attack too fast?

Fast FET attack can shave transients quickly. Back the attack off first if the bus loses life before you abandon the whole setting.

The mastering version still behaves like a fast FET compressor even if the controls are more recallable.

Release Why does the room or ambience jump forward when I speed up release?

Very fast release can bring up ambience and pumping artifacts. That is part of the FET behavior, not necessarily a fault.

If the tail of the mix starts feeling twitchy, slow the release before changing ratio or mode.

Recall Should I still keep a setup sheet if the controls are stepped?

Yes. Stepped controls help a lot, but session notes are still the fastest way to recover the exact context of an approved print.

The sheet is where the session logic lives, not just the switch positions.

Stereo How careful do I need to be about left/right balance here?

More careful than on the standard version, because the reason to use this model often includes precise stereo decisions. Even small mismatches can shift the image during mastering work.

Level-match your comparisons and document the final positions once the print is approved.

Use Case Is this only for mastering?

No. It is still a stereo FET compressor, but it is especially useful where repeatable stereo decisions matter more than casual experimentation.

Think mix bus, mastering chain, and any revision-heavy stereo workflow.

Recall What belongs in a mastering recall besides the settings?

Source version, target level context, linked or unlinked mode, and why the move was approved belong with the settings. Those details are often what make a revisit possible.

Mastering notes become valuable when they explain the decision, not only the positions.

Downloads & Resources

Keep the key files and working tools in one place

Setup Sheets Library

Use the shared Setup Sheets library for now.

WIP: Dedicated setup sheet pending.

Open Library
Quick Start Guide

Keep a dedicated quick start PDF here once the shorter guide is ready for release.

WIP: Dedicated quick start guide pending.

Use Quick Start Section
Guide As Reference

Use this page for first-session workflow, quick specs, and owner FAQ while the session is live.

Manual PDF

Keep a dedicated downloadable manual here once it is ready for release.

WIP: Dedicated manual PDF pending.

Use Manual Section
Support Prep

Use the support page when the issue is no longer about settings and starts looking like routing, stereo balance, or service.

Open Support

Service

What to have ready before you reach out

Revision Context Mention which approved print or revision the settings were tied to.
Step Context List the stepped positions, ratio, and mode instead of giving approximate descriptions.
Bus Context Say whether the issue happened on mix bus, mastering chain, or another stereo insert.