The effect OzPeter is talking about, I think, is illustrated in this thread on the 0-127 adjustment on the H4 changing the level of signals that are clipping, but because it's happening after the A-D conversion, it's just adjusting the gain of the clipped signals: http://www.2090.org/zoom/bbs/viewtopic.php...8447d4e56fc9e86 (see screenshot halfway down the page) Seems to me, and I believe this is what OzPeter is saying, that IF the limiter acts on the signal after the A-D conversion and not before then all it's doing is knocking an already clipped signal down to 0 dB, which really accomplishes nothing, since it doesn't avoid the actual problem, which is the clipping of the peak. Of course, when a limiter kicks in before the A-D conversion, that's not what is happening, and clipping is avoided. Of course, it's easy to test what the H2 is doing: set the L-M-H switch so that the signal is clipping, and record. Egage the limiter and re-record the same sample. I suspect that both samples will show clipping, the difference being that the second sample will be limited to 0dB at the peaks.