I also did a tweak to the filter yesterday which gets just a little more "air" and "openness" out of your files.
I was also tweaking the gain slightly. You want the highest gain you can get out of the DAC chip to get the best SNR, but if it's too high you can get clipping on some files. This is called inter-sample peaks. Lets say the original analog waveform coming from the mics has a sharp peak that is in-between two samples, if those two samples are set to maximum digital level, when the filter in the DAC is computing what the analog signal did in-between the samples it can get a signal higher than maximum. My filter is particularly prone to this since it is optimized to faithfully reproduce the original transients.
I thought I had this dialed in just right, but yesterday I was listening to some acapella choral music and noticed some clips, so I had to tweak it down just a little bit more and then gave it just a little more margin. It now handles everything I have just fine. It is strange that just singing has the steepest transients I have in my recordings, you would not expect that, but I have seen it many times before. Not piano or drums, but good old singing, the human voice can do amazing things.
(BTW with the new filter that recording is out of this world)
John S.