Track. Mix. Master. Save Up to 50%.
Back to results

Rupert Neve Designs 535 500 Series Diode Bridge Compressor

500 Series Diode-Bridge Compressor with Stepped Controls, Onboard Parallel Processing, Sidechain Highpass Filter, and Stereo Linking
Share
Item ID: 535
Rupert Neve Designs 535 500 Series Diode Bridge Compressor
Price:$999 and 00 cents
Special Financing - Ends Aug 2, 2026. $28/month with 36 month financing*

Sweetwater Gear Exchange
Find it used on Sweetwater's Gear Exchange
listed for
$825.00
In Stock!

Only 5 left in stock! Order Soon!
Add to Cart
Sales engineer photo
Ask An Expert

Our expertly trained Sales Engineers are ready to help!

What is a Sales Engineer?
Rupert Neve Designs 535 500 Series Diode Bridge Compressor
In Stock!
Price:$999 and 00 cents
Add to Cart
Add to list
Skip to Description
Most Popular Accessories & Related Items
Back to navigation

This article was Written By

Our Product Research Team

Get to know them!

Definitive Rupert Neve Compression for Your 500 Series Rack

Rupert Neve Designs' 535 is a 500 Series diode-bridge compressor based on the topologies found in classic Neve designs such as the 2254. Considered by many to be the holy grail for colorful, punchy dynamics enhancement, the coveted 2254 module was designed for vintage Neve 80 Series consoles and became a legend for delivering weighty, harmonically rich tonality with the miraculous ability to bring thin vocals to life, punch up electric guitar and bass, and push drums to the forefront of a mix. The 535 serves up the attitude-packed, in-your-face sound of Rupert Neve's renowned diode-bridge compressors, but with modern precision and flexibility — which makes it ideal on any source. Originally developed for the dynamics section of the acclaimed Shelford Channel, the 535 circuit features Rupert Neve Designs’ custom transformers and Class A output amplifiers: world-class RND tech, made-to-measure for the popular 500 Series format.

Improving on a classic

Although prized for their thick, punchy tone, Mr. Neve's vintage diode-bridge compressors were somewhat compromised (as was all gear of the era) by the limitations of 1970s technology. In the design of the 535, meticulous effort was made to re-create the unique sound of the 2254 while lowering the noise floor, increasing time-constant flexibility, and widening the threshold and ratio control ranges. Full-wave sidechain detection was added for optimized dynamic response, the headroom of the diode bridge itself was raised, and fully stepped controls were specified throughout for accuracy and repeatability. An onboard BLEND control is also provided for effortless parallel processing.

Pump it up

At slower settings, the 535 can deliver reasonably transparent results. With that said, if that's all you want from a compressor, you'll probably be happier with a high-quality VCA design like the RND 543. The 535 is about character. Fat, punchy, colorful, and larger-than-life; the 535 is the compressor you reach for when a track needs to shine in the mix. Flimsy bass? Lackluster piano? Wimpy vocal? Run them through the 535. Nothing else grooms a track for dominance like the classic circuits of a Neve diode-bridge compressor. And the 535 is the definitive evolution of Rupert's patented magic-wand technology. Whether you use one on individual tracks or strap a pair across your mix bus, the Rupert Neve Designs 535 is an indispensable tool for making audacious statements with your music.

Versatile, intuitive Timing control

Instead of the separate attack and release controls you find on other compressors, the 535 sports Rupert Neve Designs' unique TIMING control, which unifies both functions into one intuitive knob that lets you dial up desirable attack/release characteristics quickly. The six selectable settings were carefully chosen for different applications — a far cry from the fixed attack of the 2254!

FAST: Fast Attack (750µs), Fast Release (130ms)
MF: Medium Attack (2.25ms), Fast Release (130ms)
MED: Medium Attack (2.25ms), Medium Release (400ms)
MS: Medium Attack (4ms), Slow Release (725ms)
SLOW: Slow Attack (10ms), Slow Release (1s)
AUTO: Medium Attack (5ms), Dual-decay Release (T1 500ms, T2 1s)

The FAST and MF settings are used to clamp down on high-transient signals such as drums, plucked stringed instruments, and staccato vocals. MED and MS give you slightly slower attacks and releases (allowing more transients to pass) and a slightly longer recovery. SLOW and AUTO, designed for smooth level control, are both decidedly slower. The FAST button increases attack and release speed for each setting, effectively doubling the number of time constants from six to 12. FAST mode delivers considerably more speed capability than the 535’s celebrated progenitors, providing significantly more sonic and operational adaptability.

Timing, color, and transparency

As faster TIMING settings will generally produce higher peak-to-peak control voltage ripple, they will generate more harmonic content — which translates into more coloration in the main audio path. Conversely, lower TIMING settings will smooth out the control voltage, thereby reducing the amount of harmonic content added to the audio path — resulting in more transparent compression. Worthy of note here is that due to the nature of this topology, the time constants adapt themselves to a certain degree depending on compression ratio, threshold, and the source material. It is this dynamically generated timing shift and harmonic content that gives diode-bridge compressor designs their unique personality.

Discipline your signal

In addition to the innovative TIMING control, the 535 offers a full set of controls for shaping your dynamics. The 6-position rotary RATIO control sets the slope of the compression curve with pre-selected ratios of 1.5:1 through 8:1. The THRESHOLD control has 31 detents that range from -25dBu to +20dBu, letting you adjust the point at which compression onset occurs. The GAIN control, with 31 detents, is used to add make-up gain in a range of -6dB to +20dB. The S/C HPF is a 12dB/octave sidechain highpass filter preset to 150Hz. This will make the compressor less sensitive to the powerful low frequencies in a signal, which can cause it to exhibit a sluggish, "mushy" response.

Stereo linking

The LINK switch allows the compressor to be linked to another 535 via a sidechain control voltage. When both units are linked, the control voltage is shared between them; so when one unit is triggered, it will trigger the other unit equally. The compressor that generates the higher sidechain voltage (resulting in stronger compression) will control the compression of both audio signal paths. This can often assist in maintaining a solid center image in a stereo source. Sweetwater tip: for stereo sources, it's definitely worth auditioning the unlinked sound as well, as linking can clamp down on the effective stereo width when both compressors are triggered by one side. It will be up to you to decide if the benefit of a consistent stereo center image is worth the compromise of reduced L/R independence in the stereo field. The LINK feature is designed to utilize the link buss built into many 500 Series chassis such as the RND R6 and R10.

Onboard parallel processing

Given the natural coloration inherent in the 535’s diode bridge circuitry, the unit's onboard parallel compression capability is especially desirable. The BLEND control lets you inject varying amounts of compression into your dry, unprocessed signal, to create a natural sound that maintains dynamic range while being enhanced with blended-in color and punch.

Rupert Neve Designs 535 500 Series Diode-Bridge Compressor Features:

  • 500 Series compressor based on Rupert Neve's classic diode-bridge topologies
  • Updated, modern circuitry for state-of-the-art performance and increased versatility
  • Thick, punchy, and characterful signal enhancement
  • Slower TIMING settings produce more transparent-sounding results
  • BLEND control for onboard parallel compression
  • Sidechain highpass filter minimizes the negative influence of LF content
  • Stereo LINK switch utilizes the link buss built into many 500 Series chassis
  • Custom RND transformers and Class A output amplifiers
  • Stepped controls throughout for accuracy and repeatability
  • Precision LED level and gain-reduction meters
  • COMP IN switch for instant wet/dry comparison
  • Not standalone — requires compatible 500 Series chassis

Resources

Warranty Info

Sweetwater's FREE 2-Year Total Confidence Coverage Warranty

Extra peace of mind at no extra cost.

  • Save money with FREE parts and labor
  • Get back to making music with the industry's fastest turnaround time
  • Fix it the first time with our award-winning, factory-certified Service Department
Learn More about Total Confidence Coverage
Back to navigation

Tech Specs

  • Processor Type: Diode-Bridge Compressor
  • Number of Channels: 1
  • Controls: Threshold, Ratio, Timing, Blend, Gain
  • Threshold: -25dB to +20dB
  • Ratio: 1.5:1 to 8:1
  • Side Chain Inserts: Yes
  • Bypass: Yes
  • Module Slot Size: Single
  • Manufacturer Part Number: 535

What Makes Our Sales Engineers Great?

Sweetwater Sales Engineers are a world-class team of experts dedicated to you. Hand selected from across the globe, each brings a wealth of experience and expertise in the world of music gear to provide you with unparalleled service completely free of charge. Friendly relationships, real trust, and the right gear are only a call or a click away!

Back to navigation

Reviews

Weighty, Musical, and Versatile
I recently picked up a pair of these and put them through their paces using a country power ballad tune I'm currently mixing.

On female lead vocals they were thick and smooth sounding and by simply dialing the blend back a little it yielded very pleasing results.

On electric bass this added weight and punch while controlling dynamics.

Moving to "linked" mode, I tried them on drum overheads - While not my first choice for this song, I still received great results...stereo imaging and dynamics were great, snare and toms had some punch, and cymbals delivered a beautiful shimmering wash. It was easy to overdo it, but adjustments to threshold, speed, or blend allowed for good results even when pushing the compressor inputs fairly hard.

On a gorgeous grand piano track that was harmonically rich and only a touch bright the 535s may not have been a logical choice for some, but it worked out beautifully - adding sustain, giving more weight to the low end, making mids feel a bit thicker and creamier, and softening the higher end - exactly what this track needed.

I tried several other things as well, but my favorite use was on the electric guitar bus.... I ran the inputs to the compressor about as hard as you can without clipping, went for 2-4 db of gain reduction, and then blended it back to about 70% compressed/ 30% original signal. DANG that sounded great! Thick, warm, and rich but still with good note definition. It sounded even better when followed up with the RND 542 tape saturation emulator, also hitting the meters pretty hard.

In summary - yes, these add some color but you shouldn't be afraid to use them. Lower the input gain, reduce total amount of gain reduction, and choose slower times to get cleaner sounds. But its fun to push them hard and let the gear work its magic...
Music background: Professional engineer/producer with 30+ yrs of experience
Awesome stereo comp!
This is a deceptively versatile compressor, if for no other reason than at low ratio it's practically invisible with the right attack and release but is clearly smoothing things out on an A/B. The more you push it, the more you can really hear the character. I wouldn't call it a strong saturation as much as a tone curve, until you get to flat-out clamping.

The character of the attack is something I've come to like as well, I wouldn't call it a soft knee but it's gentle in a way that strings and vocals respond very well to. It's very easy to dial in as well. I tend to like it more on the medium to medium slow for that great smooth curtain on most things. It can aptly handle transients of drums as well, and I highly recommend trying it, because it gives a very nice energy in faster settings.

I run this for stereo applications all the time for things like mid-side, stereo synths and keys, and overheads. The stereo link and side chain works very nicely together. There no noticeable lag between sides or pulsing, just straightforward compression.
Great sounding compressor
This took some time to get used to and this is my first 500 series unit.
But the sound is great, very fluid and professional sounding.
Works well on many different instruments. Great for drums and many others
if you tweak the settings. No problems so far and I have not been disappointed
by it. However the real only issue is, it is likely I will need a second one for
stereo purposes. But, you still can make strides on more mono applications,
and it is totally worth it. I don't know how to describe the sound other than
it sounds good and professional. Very happy I bought this.
Music background: Guitarist, Piano and Cello, Audio Engineer student
Sounds Great!
I haven't used it yet on vocals, but on acoustic guitar and dulcimer it's got a beautiful, larger-than-life sound. Highly recommended.
Impressive 500 Series Compressor
Bought two of these with Adam Caesar's thoughtful assistance. Thank you Adam! These compressors have a lot of character, not necessarily colour, but they can if driven hard and fast. They're a great for drums, drum parallel, any parallel for that matter, guitars, and some vocal styles. However I've been using them mainly as a secondary compressor on the mix bus after a SSL G-bus. They just add body to the mix in a great way.
These are very powerful tools for shaping sound. I ordered two of them of course, as I suggest you do. I asked Adam if Neve sells them in matched pairs. The info he got from AMS is that they're tolerances are so tight that they don't need to be matched. Well, that obviously is not true. I ran a tone generator through them after noticing a track seemed a little low sided L to R with them across the mix bus. I found out that despite having stepped controls, the threshold pot was not the same on each unit. I'm sure Adam and Sweetwater will have this resolved super fast, so no worries on my end. Just making future buyers aware.
Music background: Professional Mix Engineer