dima1stg
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- Dec 3, 2019
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Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
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If you don't have a receiver or audio processor that can apply delays, you won't be able to align the sub in time with the main speakers. There is a way to use a software player on a computer with a plugin that processes the signal from the player the same way an audio processor does.Front of the sub is 90cm on left of reference speaker (L) and 15cm deeper.
The left one will be in all measurements as a reference.To tell you anything, we need to look at the mdat file of the measurements of the three speakers. Right, left and sub.
From help, :I was always wondering what EXL stands for?
Right.Since my goal is to find out the relationship between various speakers in a system (vs. measuring each speaker on its own), as per John (and common sense) there should be a single reference.
This is good. But if you select the output channel L+R, then the sound will go to two channels at once.During the measurement all channels, except the one being measured and L's tweeter being the reference, are muted.
It is from the impulse graphs that the timing relationships between the speakers can be accurately determined. And in order to see and coordinate the phases later, you need the 'Alignment tool'.I'm not really familiar with impulse response, just simply measuring with timing reference. Should I do something else?
If your measurements are cut off at 100 hertz, you won't see the phases of the two speakers you're trying to match after 100 hertz. If the subwoofer's cutoff frequency is 80 hertz, then its influence on the main speaker can be up to 200 hertz until the subwoofer level drops enough. If the two are out of phase, you will get pits. To get accurate data within the range you need, John recommends always measuring the full range.what's the point of measuring the full range
Specify the left tweeter channel as the "timing reference output" channel, and change the "output channel" in turn.Also measure all speakers and subs at the full range, from 0 hertz to 48 kHz.