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Frankly, if I were Audiocrazy, I would feel a little ganged up on at this point. I'm sure he's following the measurement instructions as best he can, and he's getting results that look problematic. So I really want to be as constructive as possible. I would be very interested to see separate measurements of each ST in the same position. That should at least cast light on the tweeter polarity issue. That leaves the droop in the response at higher frequencies. Audiocrazy--where are you located? I would be happy to send you a small, light 2-way that you could measure to see whether you get results anything like mine. It's difficult to make any progress unless there is a known reference point
Quote from: DMurphy on 10 Jun 2009, 02:33 amFrankly, if I were Audiocrazy, I would feel a little ganged up on at this point. I'm sure he's following the measurement instructions as best he can, and he's getting results that look problematic. So I really want to be as constructive as possible. I would be very interested to see separate measurements of each ST in the same position. That should at least cast light on the tweeter polarity issue. That leaves the droop in the response at higher frequencies. Audiocrazy--where are you located? I would be happy to send you a small, light 2-way that you could measure to see whether you get results anything like mine. It's difficult to make any progress unless there is a known reference point Ok Dennis, time to "gang up" on you. I may be wrong, but I don't think it's possible to reverse the polarity of one tweeter and have it cancel out the other tweeter above say...3kHz? Audiocrazy's measurement should have nothing to do with tweeters out of phase.I certainly wasn't trying to "gang up" on him, but I'm telling you without any doubt that his REW setup is not correct. I'd suggest he post that graph pic on hometheatershack and let the pros (Bruce and Wayne) get audiocrazy fixed up. I can assure you that his measurement will look as it should and all the speculation contained in this thread can be concluded.
Quote from: TJHUB on 10 Jun 2009, 03:25 amQuote from: DMurphy on 10 Jun 2009, 02:33 amFrankly, if I were Audiocrazy, I would feel a little ganged up on at this point. I'm sure he's following the measurement instructions as best he can, and he's getting results that look problematic. So I really want to be as constructive as possible. I would be very interested to see separate measurements of each ST in the same position. That should at least cast light on the tweeter polarity issue. That leaves the droop in the response at higher frequencies. Audiocrazy--where are you located? I would be happy to send you a small, light 2-way that you could measure to see whether you get results anything like mine. It's difficult to make any progress unless there is a known reference point Ok Dennis, time to "gang up" on you. I may be wrong, but I don't think it's possible to reverse the polarity of one tweeter and have it cancel out the other tweeter above say...3kHz? Audiocrazy's measurement should have nothing to do with tweeters out of phase.I certainly wasn't trying to "gang up" on him, but I'm telling you without any doubt that his REW setup is not correct. I'd suggest he post that graph pic on hometheatershack and let the pros (Bruce and Wayne) get audiocrazy fixed up. I can assure you that his measurement will look as it should and all the speculation contained in this thread can be concluded. Hoooookay--time to gang back. I wasn't claiming one tweeter would cancel out another. Reversing the polarity on one tweeter, or both, will cause a suckout in the crossover region, because the woofer and tweeter are supposed to be perfectly in phase at that point. if you flip the polarity, they cancel in the region of 2-3 khz, which is why I suggested there might be a problem. I wasn't referencing the droop further up. That looks more like a mic calibration problem.
I think you should start by downloading the latest mic calibration file from hometheatershack for your ECM8000 and load it into your REW software.
Quote from: TJHUB on 10 Jun 2009, 03:23 pmI think you should start by downloading the latest mic calibration file from hometheatershack for your ECM8000 and load it into your REW software. Keep in mind that the ECM8000 calibration file on that site is a generic one. To be accurate, each individual ECM8000 requires a calibration file for that individual mic. The generic file will get you close, but it will not be totally accurate.- Jim
Hmmmmmm. Thanks for doing that, but it's difficult to believe you have the speakers in the same position. There are just too many differences in the specific and overall frequency response to be explained by crossover issues or driver variation. If you do have them in the same position, then I would have to agree with others that there is something off in the calibration or measuring technique.
Keep in mind that the ECM8000 calibration file on that site is a generic one. To be accurate, each individual ECM8000 requires a calibration file for that individual mic. The generic file will get you close, but it will not be totally accurate.- Jim
Quote from: DMurphy on 10 Jun 2009, 01:36 pmHmmmmmm. Thanks for doing that, but it's difficult to believe you have the speakers in the same position. There are just too many differences in the specific and overall frequency response to be explained by crossover issues or driver variation. If you do have them in the same position, then I would have to agree with others that there is something off in the calibration or measuring technique.Dennis you are right I took the measurement at listening position and did not move the speaker to same location. I'll do that when I get a chance. I'm tied up at work and will be travelling.Quote from: jsalk on 10 Jun 2009, 03:57 pmKeep in mind that the ECM8000 calibration file on that site is a generic one. To be accurate, each individual ECM8000 requires a calibration file for that individual mic. The generic file will get you close, but it will not be totally accurate.- JimJim you are right I should get my mic calibrated to get accurate results.I agree that REW graphs does not tell the full story and I've confirmed that when I added SVS AS-EQ1. The REW graph looked almost similar to what I had using Audyssey EQ. But it sounded much different. Nevertheless I've followed the REW instructions to the T and have consulted BruceK and Wayne several times when I was learning to use REW.Jim and Dennis I really apologize if I have offended you in anyway . My intent was trying to figure out if there was any issue in my setup.All in all I am very happy with my ST's . I value the efforts and dedication Jim and Dennis takes in building such nice speakers.
That is true Jim, but there is no way the generic file is as far off as what audiocrazy's graph is showing. I'm fairly certain all of the mics tested for the calibration file proved pretty close (or close enough for home use).
Seriously guys, please look at this:Here is the graph I posted earlier in this thread. The black line in this graph is the Behringer ECM8000 mic's calibration line. In the blue circle, note which way the line goes and at what frequency.Now look at audiocrazy's graph. Again, the black line in this graph is the mic calibration line. In the blue circle, note that the line is WAY off from where it should be.I could be wrong, but I'm almost certain that the mic calibration file that audiocrazy is using is subtracting from the actual mic readings from 3kHz and up when it should be adding from 10kHz and up. This in turn would cause his upper frequency measurement to be skewed way down. Hmm...There is no doubt that the 2kHz dip Dennis has noted shouldn't be affected by the mic calibration and there certainly could be an issue there, but it doesn't change what I'm trying to get you guys to see. For grins, here is the in-room response of my HT2-TL's at my seating position. The speakers are running full-range and are about 11.5' apart and just under 14' from my listening position. The blue line is the left speaker and the red line is the right. The low end peak is from my room. Every speaker and subwoofer I've had in my room has that 38Hz peak and weird behavior around 60Hz. I have no room treatments whatsoever.
So the Behringer doesn't measure flat up to 20KHz? Hmm...that stinks. That was the mic I was going to purchase.
Now, about the falling top-end response - I do not know how well the mic is set-up on the tweeter axis. If it is off-axis much it will contribute to an even greater drop, so this is something to consider as well. I always check my speakers in my room using an RTA with pink noise to see how the balance looks in-room. When the balance is very flat at one meter it will still show a significant loss in top octave energy at 8-10 feet, but it doesn't sound that much different, because at that distance we are hearing a greater proportion of the speaker's power response, which the mic does not pic up.