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#1
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Does anyone have any shortcut tricks for determining the frequency of a
problem note without access to a parametric or sweep EQ? (I have several stepped "sweep" EQs, but the steps are so far apart as to make this method hopeless). I'm trying to determine the frequency of a single note that causes the speakers in home hifis to crap out, even though every studio monitor plays it back without problem. thanks. steve |
#2
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hollywood_steve wrote:
I'm trying to determine the frequency of a single note that causes the speakers in home hifis to crap out, even though every studio monitor plays it back without problem. What note is it? Can you tell what string and fret it'd be on a guitar? Hit it on a piano or other keyboard? -- ha |
#3
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Hardwa frequency counter.
softwa spectrum analysis tool rd |
#4
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![]() "hollywood_steve I'm trying to determine the frequency of a single note that causes the speakers in home hifis to crap out, even though every studio monitor plays it back without problem. ** Huh ?? Is the frequency a very low one ??? Or a high mid ( voice frequency) that annoys the tweeters in cheap boxes ?? .............. Phil |
#5
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hank alrich wrote:
hollywood_steve wrote: I'm trying to determine the frequency of a single note that causes the speakers in home hifis to crap out, even though every studio monitor plays it back without problem. What note is it? Can you tell what string and fret it'd be on a guitar? Hit it on a piano or other keyboard? Believe it or not, I carry a Palm Pilot around with me and sometimes determine problem frequencies by using an old program called PocketSynth. It's just a little program that puts a mini piano keyboard on the touchscreen and plays square waves when you tap with the stylus. So I tap on the screen until I hear the right thing. Once I know what note it is, it's a simple matter of plugging the note into the formula 440 * 2^(N/12), where N is the number of half steps higher than A440, to determine the frequency (roughly). - Logan |
#6
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RD Jones wrote:
Hardwa frequency counter. softwa spectrum analysis tool rd wetwa piano -- Les Cargill |
#7
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hollywood_steve ) wrote:
Does anyone have any shortcut tricks for determining the frequency of a problem note without access to a parametric or sweep EQ? (I have several stepped "sweep" EQs, but the steps are so far apart as to make this method hopeless). A guitar tuner. Another trick is just a calibrated frequency generator. Turn the knob until it hits the problem frequency. I'm trying to determine the frequency of a single note that causes the speakers in home hifis to crap out, even though every studio monitor plays it back without problem. That is going to differ considerably from one installation to another. Sadly there are no standards of any sort in the consumer world and very few rooms and speaker systems are properly set up. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#8
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Its a low bass note, somehwere between 40Hz and 100Hz or so. And no, I
don't have a piano in my 14ft x 8ft edit bay. Acoustic guitars and guitar tuners are handy, but the note is almost certainly below the low E string. I could determine the 2nd harmonic and assume the note is an octave down. My little Tannoy Reveals just filter out what they can't reproduce, like any decent nearfield. But cheap home speakers try to give you bass far beyond their actual capabilities, and that results in flapping woofah cones. Its funny that my little 6.5 inch Reveals sound so good on this particular song, but so many bass heavy consumer systems just get beaten down by this recording. And it just goes to show that having a 300watt high quality power amp is a good thing, even when the speakers are only rated for a fraction of that amount. And a rant for another day - why do jazz trios playing in small clubs insist on using a bass amp? This problem would not exist if the bass player had just played without an amp, and I would have had much more control of the low end, instead of being forced to filter low end rumble out of every mic channel. A guitar tuner. Another trick is just a calibrated frequency generator. Turn the knob until it hits the problem frequency. I'm trying to determine the frequency of a single note that causes the speakers in home hifis to crap out, even though every studio monitor plays it back without problem. That is going to differ considerably from one installation to another. Sadly there are no standards of any sort in the consumer world and very few rooms and speaker systems are properly set up. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#9
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hollywood_steve ) wrote:
Its a low bass note, somehwere between 40Hz and 100Hz or so. And no, I don't have a piano in my 14ft x 8ft edit bay. Acoustic guitars and guitar tuners are handy, but the note is almost certainly below the low E string. I could determine the 2nd harmonic and assume the note is an octave down. Measure the room with a tape measure and do the math. You'll find at least a couple nasty modes. My little Tannoy Reveals just filter out what they can't reproduce, like any decent nearfield. But cheap home speakers try to give you bass far beyond their actual capabilities, and that results in flapping woofah cones. Its funny that my little 6.5 inch Reveals sound so good on this particular song, but so many bass heavy consumer systems just get beaten down by this recording. And it just goes to show that having a 300watt high quality power amp is a good thing, even when the speakers are only rated for a fraction of that amount. Traditionally, this was the big difference between American and British home stereo speakers. The underdamped bass is a traditional American thing that dates back to the early jukebox era. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#11
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On 6 Jan 2005 10:46:12 -0800, "hollywood_steve )"
wrote: And a rant for another day - why do jazz trios playing in small clubs insist on using a bass amp? This problem would not exist if the bass player had just played without an amp, and I would have had much more control of the low end, instead of being forced to filter low end rumble out of every mic channel. I asked this question of Chip Jackson, a jazz bassist. HE gave me a paper in which he discusses the whole matter in some detail. Basically, an amp, even a small one, gives the bassist a lot more expressional freedom. Pull offs and and hammer-ons become different matters. Plus is saves the bassist's fingers (Ask Christian McBride who added an amp after getting a nasty case of tendonitis). Finally, the amp changes the instrument in almost the same way that it changed the jazz guitar when Charlie Christian and others started using it. It's not just a matter of loudness. Willie K. Yee, M.D. http://users.bestweb.net/~wkyee Developer of Problem Knowledge Couplers for Psychiatry http://www.pkc.com Webmaster and Guitarist for the Big Blue Big Band http://www.bigbluebigband.org |
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