Part 2 - 2.1 Stereo Calibration - what am I missing?

Dave the Rave

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Main Amp
Yamaha AS2100
DAC
Schitt Yggdrasil
Computer Audio
Daphile (USB) or Oppo BD103 (Optical or COAX)
Front Speakers
Yamaha NS-2000
Subwoofers
JBL LS120
Few years back, I started the DSP journey through REW. Advice from experts here and elsewhere brought a real SQ transformation guided by REW measurement capabilities. Tried Dirac but way prefer simpler adjustments using REW.
Below is a snapshot of the measurements years back compared to now.
Key reasons for the improvements are the usual suspects recommended by audiophiles: Speaker positioning, level matching, proper measurements, DSP below 300h only, get source right with minimal latency, decent DAC/amp/speakers.
I am quite happy with the PEQ applied and only use cuts. I always found dynamics/clarity could be compromised when trying to smooth the FR towards the curve (with PEQ gains or convolution DSP).
However, i just wanted to know if there are any other techniques I can use to further improve the bass side esp tackling the nulls?
I have attached the measurements. Note, I can't go with room treatment; Most of the time the impulse graph align at zero when I place the mic accurately in the middle (hence no issue on impulse response).

Measurements 3 years back
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Measurements NOW

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PEQ Applied
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Impulse Response
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Attachments

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Look at that huge forest of early and loud reflections (ETC taken from measurement of left speaker alone). Are you using one of those mini tripods that come with the UMIK-1? This is typically what you see when you use a mini tripod and perch it on a chair, or wedge a microphone between books to take a measurement, etc. That first reflection at 0.6ms is coming from something that is about 20cm delayed from the microphone. For e.g. a wall that is 10cm away, or a sofa, etc. Your measurement needs to be taken from where your head is when you listen. Ideally you should purchase a proper mic stand, or at least duct tape your microphone to a broomstick and try to get it in a proper position. Mic tripods are cheap, my first tripod cost $50 and lasted me for years until I broke it. My new tripod is much nicer, but it still cost me only $200.

As for those dips, some of them will be real, and some of them will be artefacts from microphone positioning. You can't tell which is which from a single sweep from a fixed position.

Which Australian city are you in? I'm in Melbourne.
 
You can get a nice Pro Tripod here in the States for under $100.00 USD... Try Guitar Center or Sweetwater .com...
 
Thx mate am from Sydney. Yep the cheapo tripod in play but taken at head position from the listening sofa.
What are the correction options with the better measurements? I will definitely get another standing tripod if that would help.
 
Hi Dave. I love Sydney. In fact I have a rental property over there in Zetland.

You do not want to correct artefacts from microphone positioning. If you mount a mic on a tripod and take a single sweep, that mic is capturing sound from a very specific point in space. If there are a lot of local reflections, there will also be a lot of comb filtering. Comb filtering causes peaks and dips in the frequency response.

Remember that your microphone has a 1/4" (6.35mm) capsule, and your ears are about 15-18cm apart. In addition, you also move around in your listening chair. Your ear "averages out" the peaks and dips in the response which change very quickly. What your ear does not average out are actual peaks and dips that do not change. For example, if your room had a massive 80Hz peak that does not change much when you move around your seat, you would surely hear that. It is the same story if you made an inappropriate EQ adjustment. The measurement would look fine (from that very specific point in space) but it would sound off.

So the real question is what to EQ, and what to leave alone. Some people will make a blanket rule that you should not EQ a single mic measurement, and you should only EQ an MMM or averaged measurements from several positions around your listening area. I think that it depends - if your frequency response does not change much over a listening area, then it's OK to equalise from a single position.

The presence of copious early and loud reflections in your ETC suggests that you are measuring (and potentially correcting) a lot of "local" phenomena. If you want to investigate this, place your microphone at the MLP (Main listening position) and do a sweep. Label it MLP0. Then move the mic 10cm, 20cm, 30cm to the left and take sweeps. Do the same for the right. You will end up with 7 measurements: MLP-30, MLP-20, MLP-10, MLP0, MLP+10, MLP+20, MLP+30. You can choose a larger area if you want to correct for a larger sweet spot.

Overlay all of them and examine the bass response closely. You will see that some of the curves "move" by quite a bit. Others may be relatively static. Then average all of them (Vector Average) and use that as basis for your EQ. The alternative is to do an MMM, but I don't like MMM's because I prefer to study the peaks and dips in detail. The advantage of the MMM is that it is quick, repeatable, and you don't have to purchase a mic tripod. Just duct tape your mic to a broomstick and you're done! The outcome is the same though, so do whichever makes more sense to you :)

I know you said you can't install room treatment. But ... looking at your ETC, I think you should consider it.
 
@Keith_W Thanks for that elaborate explanation. You did well having a foot in Zetland (prices gone through the roof).
I am not an expert at analysing all the REW components other than FR but your proposed actions are easy to understand and makes a lot of sense.
Excited to get onto the new measurements and will report back. I did manage to find a proper standing mic in the meantime as @ddude003 suggested (thx for calling it out).
 
G'Day,
Ran a new set of measurement over the week-end with a standing mic and MLP. Attached is the updated file and showing the mic in the listening room.
- Found that I was using the wrong cal file for the Umik mic since i have 2 !!!! Resolved that issue.
- Moved the mic as advised above. Found the R channel (ref) Impulse Response consistent unlike L channel which moved. I am assuming this is ok.
- Vector average is not the same as RMS average - not sure if this is OK as I am assuming the IR derives the Vector Average
- Applied PEQ cuts per the Target (with some manual adj). The net effect yielded BETTER results than the previous PEQ. Applied < 300h only.
So one good win through that long process. Happy to get any other feedbacks.
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Attachments

Let me show you something.

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These are the impulse responses for all your left sided measurements.

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If you select them and click "Align IR start", this is the result. The reason why this matters:

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Compare the vector average you obtained without aligning IR start (green) with mine (purple). In this case there is very little difference between them below about 500Hz or so. If you were planning to DSP the high frequencies above 500Hz then this kind of summation error matters.

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I was telling you about the difference between "real" dips in the response (room related) vs. "local" dips (caused by proximity of the measurement mic to furniture). This overlay of all your left sided measurements shows you the difference between the two quite nicely. If you checked over a wider area, you would observe bigger differences. Not that you need to, if this is where your head is positioned when you listen, that's all you need to correct for.

Anyway it appears that in your case, your measurement does not seem to change much over a +/- 30cm listening area. So you can go ahead and correct it with PEQ.
 
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