0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 3097 times.
Earlier I mentioned playing the sweep tone through all the speakers at once. With most pop music, and a lot of other music and all LP records, the bass is centered to sound equally through both speakers. So to learn the true response at low frequencies for music you listen to, you should do the same and play the sweep through both the left and right speakers at the same time. If you use a subwoofer, that should also be engaged for the same reason. However, it's useful to also test each speaker separately. This will quickly reveal unusual problems such as a blown midrange driver, or a severe peak or null that affects only one speaker.
Great questions. The first step is to establish loudspeaker placements and the listening position. This article shows the best way to do that:How to set up a roomThe "38 percent rule" is just a starting point, though it works well enough that people without the means to measure can just do what's shown and continue on to room treatment. If you are able to measure, that lets you fine tune the placements for the flattest bass response.Bass response should be measured with all speakers active, or at least the two mains plus a subwoofer if you have one. It's a good idea to measure each speaker separately too, but that's more to find problems that might be missed otherwise. The reason I recommend playing all speakers when measuring is because that's how bass instruments are usually played. The quote below from my Audio Expert book explains in more detail.As for "musical" bass, I think the ideal is to aim for a flat response. You'll never achieve perfection in any home-sized room! But it's still the ideal response IMO. Note that this has nothing to do with the type of bass traps used. Tuned traps can be useful in some situations, mostly to target very low frequencies. But for most rooms, conventional "porous" bass traps are the best solution because they're broadband.--Ethan
Very nice to see you here Ethan!
Thanks Bob, I've been here for almost ten years!--Ethan
measure to confirm or finalise bass response and complete with solutions for the higher frequencies.