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You could always use your ears as a last resort.
Quote from: satfrat on 13 Oct 2008, 07:21 pmYou could always use your ears as a last resort. Yes, but that's not as reliable as you might think. The main problem is the key of the music interacts with resonances and comb filtering in the room. So a speaker placement that sounds perfect for a tune in the key of A might be totally boomy - or totally thin - for music in another key. Using software like REW lets you nail the placement exactly because you can see what happens at all frequencies at once.--Ethan
Nulls and peaks have nothing to do with personal preference! They exist or they don't, and you won't know where unless you measure accurately. Whether you like peaks and nulls or not is irrelevant to the discussion, I think.
Guess my only point is that of personal preference in that maybe one should trust what they like and not what they read on a gage.
Quote from: satfrat on 14 Oct 2008, 05:10 pmGuess my only point is that of personal preference in that maybe one should trust what they like and not what they read on a gage.I knew that was your point, which was why I spent the time to explain why measuring is better anyway. Once you measure and move things to make the room as flat as it'll get, then you can use an EQ to screw it up again. And Yes, if you call me a "meter reader" I'll take that as a compliment. --Ethan
Ethan, assuming a properly treated and set up room, do you think EQ is ever useful for home stereo listening
It wasn't meant as an insult Ethan, sorry I butted in.