THE VU METER
by Ron Meyer
President, Professional Sound Corp.
Thirty years have gone by since Bell
Telephone Laboratories, NBC, and CBS joined together
to develop and standardize the Volume-Unit meter. The
VU meter as we commonly know it, has remained unchanged
since its introduction and is widely used in the audio
field, even today. Though the VU meter has been in use
for a long time, many people still have misconceptions
about its properties and use.
The VU meter was designed to have
ballistics (dynamic characteristics) that roughly approximates
the human ear. In this manner the meter proved useful
in determining signal levels for audio broadcast and
recording. The meter itself has a response that is RMS
or "average" reading. This stipulates that
it will respond with a reading that averages out the
complex wave forms that typically make up an audio signal,
and this can lead to problems when recording audio that
is of a transient nature. The transients may have a
peak level that is 10 to 15 dB higher than average and
are virtually ignored by the VU meter, thus causing
overload during recording. To compensate for this, many
users and manufacturers incorporate a six to eight dB
lead into the calibration of the meter. This in effect
helps to overcome the transient response to the problems.
The VU meter is based on the telephone
company's 1939 reference level of zero dBm being equal
to 1 mW into 600 ohms, or as the better known 0.775
volts into 600 W. This reference level was chosen by
the telephone company as the best compromise between
crosstalk and signal to noise ratio in their system.
It should be noted that the VU meter is a relative reading
meter in that its zero is always relative to some other
standard such as +4 dBm outputs on today's audio gear.
Even though the quality of electronic
equipment has improved dramatically over the past 50
years, these early standards developed by the telephone
companies are the basis for most electronic measurements
used today.
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