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Quote from: BobRex on 5 Oct 2007, 04:50 pmRoger, maybe I missed it, but did you also mention the 3dB gain from stereo?That's something to ponder. I will say that if you have one speaker playing (as done by swinging the balance to the right or disconnecting the other speaker) and you bring the other one in back in the meter will go up 6dB for mono information. For uncorrelated noise (pink or white) you are correct, the meter will go up 3 dB.As to 3 vs 6 dB are you considering the added amplifier/acoustic power that another channel produces or are you keeping total amp output constant?
Roger, maybe I missed it, but did you also mention the 3dB gain from stereo?
Another question: I'm having a running argument with my wife about what the appropriate volume level should be when listening to classical music . Can anyone tell me approximately what the spl might be (on the loudest passages), in the dress circle say, at a symphony concert? If I can get an answer to this question, and the question about the analogue vs digital Radio Shack meter I intend to get one.
I'm too old to go to rock concerts anymore, but still have a hard time understanding why you'd go to a concert wearing earplugs. Hopefully they provide quite a visual show as the sound in an arena via a PA system and earplugs must be horrible.
What I imagine is going on in the reader's mind (given those quotes and questions) is the assumption that one can measure frequency response in their room with this meter. The simple answer is you can't. Standing waves and reflections will cause the meter to swing wildly with small changes in frequency and the numbers will be meaningless. The best way of testing a speaker's frequency response is a tone-burst generator and an oscilloscope. We did this at Beveridge and I do it for all my speaker tests. The burst is all over by the time any reflection comes back to the mic. The burst amplitude is recorded and, even more valuable, I get to see the shape of the burst. MLSSA can not do this and frankly satisfying MLSSA has resulted in some pretty bad sounding speakers. Harold Beveridge (we called him Bev) often said to speaker makers when shown their frequency response curves "Yea, that's great, now what does it look like when you move the microphone". He could move the mic all over the place and the response was virtually unaffected.
As I write this last part I recall a reviewer who wanted to review my 300 watt monoblocks. I asked what speaker sensitivity at which he listened. He already had determined he used just a watt or two so I suggested the RM-10 (my SE amps came later). He told me he could tell the difference between a 100 watt and 300 watt amp even at those levels. I did not send him a unit for review.