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If my room measures poorly will the program and its measurements guide me as to how to treat my room?
Try HOLM Impulse - it's free and more comprehensive.
This is one reason people like Open Baffle subs so much - it acoustically deals with one of the room modes
Try HOLM Impulse - it's free and more comprehensive. It will show you where your major nodes are. There are 3 major dimensional nodes in every room - Front to Rear, Side to Side, and Floor to Ceiling.The thing to be aware of - the side to side and front to rear bass nodes will change depending on your listening location. These are iffy when it comes to correction. However, there's also a floor to ceiling mode which will stay fairly consistent throughout the room, and that should definitely be attacked with EQ or a bass trap.This is one reason people like Open Baffle subs so much - it acoustically deals with one of the room modes (side to side), leaving only the floor-ceiling and Front-Rear wall modes to deal with. Floor-Ceiling can be dealt with via EQ or Bass traps, and so you are only left with a single troublesome node. Still not perfect, but a lot better than three bad nodes!
Originally used a Behringer, calibrated from Cross-Spectrum but I could never get the calibration file to load up properly to HOLM.
Plus the M23 is phase and impulse perfect and the Behringer is not (and that cannot be addressed via calibration files).
Thanks to everyone for all the input. I haven't even looked at REW yet so I don't know what is required but I don't have a "real" microphone. What I do have is the setup mic that came with my onkyo receiver. I know it is probably heresy but that is the microphone that I was planing on using initially. Depending on the results and if necessary, I might set up to a behringer or something. Good, bad or indeed, heresy?Garth
This is a common question, right up there with "Will a mode calculator tell me how to treat my room?" The answer to both is No. The main reasons to measure your room are:1) To see how bad it really is. Most people used to seeing frequency response graphs for electronics and speakers have no idea how badly all rooms skew the response.2) To see how much better the response and ringing became after adding treatment. Of course, the improvement from adding room treatment is always very obvious by ear.I never suggest not measuring! Some people enjoy learning the theory behind room acoustics. But for those who just want a solution, measuring is not really needed. Regardless of what you measure, the basic solution will be the same anyway: corner bass traps plus absorbers at the side-wall and ceiling reflection points.--Ethan
above a certain level I think you need measurements to see what is left to be done / how far away you are from targets