John,
The March 2026 edition of audioXpress has an interesting article on transducer distortion and measurements. It's by Steve Temme of Listen, Inc. who proposed a distortion measurement algorithm (1993) he called Frequency Normalized Distortion. He explains and demonstrates in the article that the low frequency distortions may not necessarily be an issue when examined from the frequency normalized aspect for a given transducer. His arguments are solid. I think it would be beneficial to have this option in REW. Given what I see in his presentation, it may be a fairly complex addition, though. Of course it would also add overhead to the processing required. I suspect that the data exists in REW for that.
Is this something you could consider adding to REW? It would likely be a new graphing tab in the main window and the Overlays. Or the overlays would have additional options for "Measure to plot". This would make for some confusion in some users, but I think that the addition would be very beneficial as another aspect of distortion analysis of transducers.
The March 2026 edition of audioXpress has an interesting article on transducer distortion and measurements. It's by Steve Temme of Listen, Inc. who proposed a distortion measurement algorithm (1993) he called Frequency Normalized Distortion. He explains and demonstrates in the article that the low frequency distortions may not necessarily be an issue when examined from the frequency normalized aspect for a given transducer. His arguments are solid. I think it would be beneficial to have this option in REW. Given what I see in his presentation, it may be a fairly complex addition, though. Of course it would also add overhead to the processing required. I suspect that the data exists in REW for that.
Is this something you could consider adding to REW? It would likely be a new graphing tab in the main window and the Overlays. Or the overlays would have additional options for "Measure to plot". This would make for some confusion in some users, but I think that the addition would be very beneficial as another aspect of distortion analysis of transducers.






