GHi is a resonant high-pass filter.
It has three simple controls and one useful purpose. It filters out frequencies above a user-defined cut-off frequency, and adds variable amounts of resonance at that point.
It has three simple controls and one useful purpose. It filters out frequencies above a user-defined cut-off frequency, and adds variable amounts of resonance at that point.
- Gain.
- Cut Off.
- Res.
- Peak Display.
(5 / 5)
I use this for cutting hiss from vintage recordings and it does the job superbly. I often use this simple but effective filter for derumbling of LP tracks, and it performs the task very well indeed. In fact, it is the best filter that I have found for this type of low frequency work.
This is a really bad, amateurish high-pass filter. Even with the cutoff at 20 HZ the Gain affects all the audible range! A proper High-Pass filter should leave the gain of the high frequency range above the cutoff frequency intact and adjust only the gain of the frequencies bellow the cutoff range.
I can´t understand this criticism. I made a test with a high resolution pink-noise sample -> "GVST GHi" -> "VoxengoSpan" to analyse the behavior of this free(!) plugin: Everything looks and sounds fine. This is a pro-quality-VST. If you want a filter with more analogue character try "Analog Obsession LCF". But the CPU-consumption is much more higher than GHi. Thanks to GVST!