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Yes thanks John, read and reread those, lots.Oddly, the part that worries me most is the fact I have only an iMac, no MacBook or laptop, and not sure what gear I will need for measurements. I have an old AudioControl active bass crossover device (this proved singularly disappointing) which came with a microphone so perhaps the mike could be used for in-room measurements?
I have been using the SRC2496 and DCX2496 combination for a lot of years now and been quite satisfied all the time. I use steep crossover slopes were I for instance have found Butterworth filter better performing sometimes than L-R type. For mid and tweeter I have used small Trends 10.1 T-amps with excellent results. However what makes the greatest difference in sound is the quallity of the speaker units. I am very pleased with the last (?) version of the Blindstone. A B&G Neo10 might better it though./Erling
ears are the best tools for measuring unless you plan to market your speakers to the general public. speakers that measure well tend to sound dull by comparison, which is the reason why I tend not to use the room eq function on the DEQX
I'd have to agree with Greg. "Measures well but sounds bad" suggests to me that there's a gap in understanding of the "measurements" and the correlation with subjective performance - please note that is not a criticism, I have and am still very much going through this learning process. I realize it's a completely different type of system than the DEQX but I've found manual setting of filters in the miniDSP to be much preferable than REW's automatic mode, which takes (in my experience) a lot of mucking with the algorithm parameters to produce a reasonable result. VR - you must surely be using (gated?) measurements on the drivers at least?
Wouldnt mind hearing experiences of any miniDSP users here.
hi johnR,how to do the dipole compensation on miniDSP?
Um, Rev B has lower gain... people do seem to have problems with the gain structure issue with DSPs.Well, it's a balancing act between both stages. Rev B's higher sensitivity of 2V may be offset by a lower net gain in output, compared to Rev A's 0.9V input stage. My board allowed me to switch from A to B and neither drove the amps to full volume w/o clipping the input. Many people seem to have had the same problem. The balanced 2x4 has slightly more output, 2Vrms if I remember correctly, so maybe one day I wil try that. In the meanwhile I continue to use my DBX 2231 which is an analog prosound dual 31 band EQ with type III noise reduction. There is zero noise plus all the clean output one could ever need, both balanced and unbalanced. It's signal/noise ratio is noticably higher than MiniDSP, there is no bit depth issue, and no degradation in SQ by introducing an extra A/D/A conversion step.
i would like to know also about the gains structure of minidsp.