Thanks Martin for your fast reply.
Anyone reading this in the future and saying Hey I need what Rich is talking about.
I would recommend doing what I will probably end up doing, but it will use more CPU I am sure and that is exploring VST Channel Strip Plugin's.
Waves makes a bunch that emulate high end consoles like SSL's. There are others from companies like Softube and many others.
Thanks for adding VST's as that will make a good workaround in regards to this,
to a point.
I will try to sway you a little bit more before giving up completely on this as the workaround above only works to a point.
In your manual, as it was pointed out to me, there is a scale listed.
Why can't that scale be onscreen all the time?
For me and the reason I am asking for this is that right now there is no way to describe to someone with granularity what is happening or what to do with the audio.
I can not say raise it X or Y amount and must rely on 'till it sounds good' or 'before it crackles' which is subjective and not objective, also not teachable consistently.
I can tell you the bit rate, sample rate, fps, and a bunch of other very technical things, but I can't say the meters are peaking at X or Y.(not easily or quickly for me at least)
The second part is more of a bigger picture type thing and many would say very subjective.
I know that vMix is many people's first foray into Audio and Video.
By making the faders maxxed out by default many think this is the 'norm' in the audio world.
Unfortunately that is very far from the truth.
As I said on Facebook if I put all my faders on a sound board to maximum and a professional Audio person saw that they might just tell me to leave and never come back.
It also has the potential if used elsewhere of 'breaking things' and it is something that a new person only familiar with vMix might not understand.
If the default was 75% of maximum it would allow room to move up the fader and train people that volumes should not be maxxed out all the time.
I understand that the things I am discussing could be considered very subjective except many professionals will discount vMix because of things like this.
Which might be a good thing in a way but I don't see it that way personally.
As I always say vMix is my favorite Audio Video Computer System I have ever used and I have used a lot since my first AVC piece of gear the DigiView Digitizer with my Panasonic CCTV camera and color wheel, first Red(spin Wheel) then Green(Spin Wheel) then Blue(Spin Wheel) I think that is the correct order as it has been a while.
Thanks again Martin for creating this amazing software that I still find incredible things in every day. Love those UV Maps.
Rich Shumaker