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#1
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Hi All.
I just had a run through of my recently renovated studio control room with a Rane RTA/pink noise gen. Basically I sent the pink noise through the mixer/monitors placed the test mic (came with the rta) at mix position. checked the volume with a dbmeter at around 85 db C weighted, and set the rta for same. What I see is basically flat (at 3db window) response from 63 hz to 2.5 khz, but then all above 2.5 khz drops off the meter after that. Question : Am I doing this correctly? The room sounds fairly live (not completely dead), I would have thought the high frequency stuff would be flat also to a certain point. Should I adjust the high end response (3db boost 2.3 khz shelf) on my Event 20/20ps? And how should I calibrate my subwoofer? I set its crossover at about 80 hz or so but it still sees some frequenceis above that point no matter what the crossover is set to. I want to make things better not worse. Any suggestions? Cheers, -- Jason www.JasonWhelan.com |
#2
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"jw" wrote in message ...
Hi All. I just had a run through of my recently renovated studio control room with a Rane RTA/pink noise gen. Basically I sent the pink noise through the mixer/monitors placed the test mic (came with the rta) at mix position. checked the volume with a dbmeter at around 85 db C weighted, and set the rta for same. What I see is basically flat (at 3db window) response from 63 hz to 2.5 khz, but then all above 2.5 khz drops off the meter after that. Question : Am I doing this correctly? The room sounds fairly live (not completely dead), I would have thought the high frequency stuff would be flat also to a certain point. Should I adjust the high end response (3db boost 2.3 khz shelf) on my Event 20/20ps? And how should I calibrate my subwoofer? I set its crossover at about 80 hz or so but it still sees some frequenceis above that point no matter what the crossover is set to. I want to make things better not worse. Any suggestions? Cheers, Jason - Does your Rane RTA have finer resolution than 3 dB? If so, use it! Now about the "lack" of HF, are you sure your monitors are functioning correctly? Are you sure the Calibrated mic is still in calibration? What about the mic cable connecting the 2, is it 100%? |
#3
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"jw" wrote in message ...
Hi All. I just had a run through of my recently renovated studio control room with a Rane RTA/pink noise gen. Basically I sent the pink noise through the mixer/monitors placed the test mic (came with the rta) at mix position. checked the volume with a dbmeter at around 85 db C weighted, and set the rta for same. What I see is basically flat (at 3db window) response from 63 hz to 2.5 khz, but then all above 2.5 khz drops off the meter after that. Question : Am I doing this correctly? The room sounds fairly live (not completely dead), I would have thought the high frequency stuff would be flat also to a certain point. Should I adjust the high end response (3db boost 2.3 khz shelf) on my Event 20/20ps? And how should I calibrate my subwoofer? I set its crossover at about 80 hz or so but it still sees some frequenceis above that point no matter what the crossover is set to. I want to make things better not worse. Any suggestions? Cheers, Jason - Does your Rane RTA have finer resolution than 3 dB? If so, use it! Now about the "lack" of HF, are you sure your monitors are functioning correctly? Are you sure the Calibrated mic is still in calibration? What about the mic cable connecting the 2, is it 100%? |
#4
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Jason,
I want to make things better not worse. Good goal. :-) First, assuming you're using standard third octave bands, take any readings you get with a grain of salt. Especially at low frequencies, third octave analysis is far too coarse to see the true response. Even 1/12th octave is too coarse to see the magnitude of the peaks and dips that are surely present in your room below about 300 Hz. You mentioned C weighting. That applies a curve to the metering which intentionally skews the response to correlate to how the ear hears at different frequencies. I'm not familiar with your particular meter, so I may be missing something. But normally, pink noise sent through speakers and then miked and metered should be measured flat. If you hear highs fine in the room but the meter drops off sharply above 2.5 KHz, I have to suspect the weighting. If you want a real eye-opener, play some steady low frequency sine waves between, say, 60 and 300 Hz. As each frequency plays, walk around the room and listen for places where the volume gets louder and others where it drops to practically nothing. THAT is the true room response at low frequencies. --Ethan |
#5
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"jw" wrote in message ...
Hi All. I just had a run through of my recently renovated studio control room with a Rane RTA/pink noise gen. Basically I sent the pink noise through the mixer/monitors placed the test mic (came with the rta) at mix position. checked the volume with a dbmeter at around 85 db C weighted, and set the rta for same. What I see is basically flat (at 3db window) response from 63 hz to 2.5 khz, but then all above 2.5 khz drops off the meter after that. Question : Am I doing this correctly? The room sounds fairly live (not completely dead), I would have thought the high frequency stuff would be flat also to a certain point. Skip the RTA and play a tone ladder. Do you measure the same level on the high frequency tones? Should I adjust the high end response (3db boost 2.3 khz shelf) on my Event 20/20ps? If you do, what happens? And how does it sound? And how should I calibrate my subwoofer? I set its crossover at about 80 hz or so but it still sees some frequenceis above that point no matter what the crossover is set to. Right. There is a considerable range where the mains and the sub see the same signal. Put the sub down, and move it forward and back until the response is flat at the listening position. Then play a tone ladder and listen to how the bass sounds at different parts in the room. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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Thks for the comments. I'll do as suggested.
Appreciate the responses. Cheers -- Jason www.JasonWhelan.com "Ethan Winer" ethanw at ethanwiner dot com wrote in message ... Jason, I want to make things better not worse. Good goal. :-) First, assuming you're using standard third octave bands, take any readings you get with a grain of salt. Especially at low frequencies, third octave analysis is far too coarse to see the true response. Even 1/12th octave is too coarse to see the magnitude of the peaks and dips that are surely present in your room below about 300 Hz. You mentioned C weighting. That applies a curve to the metering which intentionally skews the response to correlate to how the ear hears at different frequencies. I'm not familiar with your particular meter, so I may be missing something. But normally, pink noise sent through speakers and then miked and metered should be measured flat. If you hear highs fine in the room but the meter drops off sharply above 2.5 KHz, I have to suspect the weighting. If you want a real eye-opener, play some steady low frequency sine waves between, say, 60 and 300 Hz. As each frequency plays, walk around the room and listen for places where the volume gets louder and others where it drops to practically nothing. THAT is the true room response at low frequencies. --Ethan |
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