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May I respectfully disagree?Using programs like this is not a panacea for doing actual work.They may be a good starting point, but I've NEVER heard one set-up that I couldn't improve upon in a fundamentally powerful and musical way. I've come to believe that an acoustician/mathematician/programmer sitting in a room hundreds of miles yours cannot possibly know what will sound best in your room. He can provide some exceptionally important guidelines, but in no way is any program I've heard likely to approach the very best result.No problem with using it to get a great idea as to where to start, just don't think those pretty curves are the best sound you can get because they certainly are not.Maybe I misunderstood your post, - I'm just saying that an organanically tuned final sound will be more pleasing than a mechanically tuned sound.
This is a reply to post no. 70 by cheap-jack in the "When do you need to go below 40hz" thread. http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=107243.msg1102140;topicseen#new(1) It can appear that all is well when you measure your system's bass response only at your listening position and it looks like you have achieved flat response.(2) This single measurement done at only one point in the room fails to reveal the existence of a complex pattern of standing waves that are in the room between the listening position and the loudspeakers. (3) The the standing waves are a function of the rooms dimensions and are inescapable. If the cavity resonance aspect of the room is not addressed in some fashion, either actively via a CABS approach or passively via absorption, the room's resonant behavior in the bass frequencies will muddy the sound of bass instruments and the alternating zones of high and low pressure between the listening position and the loudspeaker will significantly degrade the imaging qualities of the system. (4) In a basement it can be more difficult to realize that the quality of the bass reproduction is suffering due to room resonance problems. (5) The basement's concrete floor and walls do not vibrate in sympathy with the bass frequencies as they can in an above ground room with two by four wood walls and a suspended floor. The vibration of the above ground structure, particularly when excited by standing waves, will sound much worse in the bass region by comparison. (6) When the standing waves in the room are reduced or eliminated,the bass becomes better and the the stereo image.. (7) If the CABS approach is used to damp the rooms bass resonance behavior a particularly dramatic A- B demonstration can be done. By simply by turning off the rear sub-woofers, the three dimensional immersive sound-stage which has filled the room will abruptly collapse ....
Perhaps I have not explained the problem thoroughly enough yet. Scotty
It has been demonstrated that the human ear/mind has a remarkable ability to acclaimate to the sound in different settings. This explains why our experiences don't line up with the physics. Here's a simple solution, if you currently have a sub or not to address to issues raised by anand/scotty:http://www.spatialcomputer.com/page9/page10/page10.htmlFor $1295 USD each this subs don't connect to your system. The built in mike/computer produce out of phase real time correction when placed on the back wall with no setup/calibration needed.
I will try giving you an analogy that describes what is taking place in a room with uncontrolled resonances below the Schroeder frequency. First imagine the imaging information projected by your loudspeakers as cargo containers full of very breakable blown glassware. These are on cargo ships traveling across the room to your ears. On the way to their destination they encounter high seas and very rough water, which are the complex pattern of standing waves that exist in your room. While no ships were lost on the way to the final port of call a whole lot of glassware was broken due to the rough water the ships had to pass through.The cargo did not arrive intact. In the same way, critical damage was doneto the imaging information as it tried to pass through the zones of high and low pressure between the loudspeakers and your ears. When you position your speakers for best imaging you are trying to work around the damaged cargo problem and achieve something you can live with, while never realizing that the containers are full of broken glass. If you control the standing wave problem you do two things simultaneously. The bass arrives in step with the rest of the frequency spectrum giving you better bass resolution and impact and the imaging information survives the trip intact. You are now listening to a coherent delivery of the entire musical waveform, which results your system reproducing a much more three dimensional sound-stage with very well defined bass. When you add a second sub-woofer and have things setup correctly,you can turn off the rear sub and watch the heretofore 3D sound-stage collapse against the front wall and turn into musical wall paper.Scotty