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Things I have (sort of) learned_ Audio fades are one of the most CPU-intensive tasks you can possibl

Published on December 03, 2025

Fading Audio is ROUGH on CPUs - YouTube Fading Audio is ROUGH on CPUs - YouTube
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Alright, you're going to have to bear with me, folks—maths has never been my strong point. Which is probably why I never understood why audio fades were so massively CPU-demanding, but thankfully, YouTuber LaurieWired has created an explainer video that I can almost follow. Almost.

Let me give it a shot regardless. Essentially, when you lower the volume of an audio source in a consistent manner, you're gradually adjusting a number value. Let's say you start by halving it, before gradually lowering and lowering it into smaller and smaller numbers.

So far, so straightforward. However, as these numbers get smaller, they become what are referred to as subnormals. Subnormals cost a significant number of clock cycles to compute, becoming exponentially greater the finer the adjustment made, which means (especially in the early days of Digital Audio Workstations and the Intel Pentium 4) CPUs were previously grinding to a halt trying to accurately compute the arithmetic of a simple gradual audio fade.

All of this goes back to the way modern chips handle floating point calculations, as a CPU attempts to ratify a dense sequence of numbers to a degree of accuracy that the human ear simply can't perceive when applied to a gradually lowering audio output. It's essentially shooting for a degree of accuracy that strikes at the heart of why floating point calculations exist in the first place, to precisely represent real numbers.

A close-up image of an Intel Raptor Lake die.

(Image credit: Fritzchens Fritz)

In essence, while the simple act of turning a volume knob in an analogue system turns down the audio in a set of degrees with perfect efficiency, this kind of descending, volume-reducing pattern calculated on a CPU demands a massive amount of subnormal-based arithmetic that is simply unnecessary to achieve [[link]] the eventual result.

Modern DAW plugins disable subnormal CPU functions in order to get around this processor-chewing behaviour, and x86 processors and Arm processors, with their differing instruction sets, have different methods of preventing the processor from delving into the realms of the subnormal and cooking themselves for no perceptible gain.

As someone who's worked in recording [[link]] studios for a significant portion of my life, I had literally no idea all this was going on. My role was to plug in (and occasionally take out) cables, stack preamps and VSTs, tweak EQs, position microphones, and occasionally get into arguments with metal guitarists regarding the lengths of their solos.

For reference, never longer than a minute. Ever. Not without a bridge in between, which will require you to actually write some music rather than blathering off into a hellish sequence of modal masturbation.

Sorry, where was I? Ah yes, maths. Anyway, this is a great example of some mind-expanding knowledge that I'm certain to forget [[link]] by tomorrow. What I will do, however, is tell everyone that there's a great YouTube video that explains it, and link them to this research paper, which I absolutely do not possess the brain power to fully comprehend [PDF warning].

I would go deeper, but I really don't have time to get into it all now. Read it yourself, and, err, let me know what you think.

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