A lot of audiophiles are stuck in the 40s-70s. The last 45 years of recordings say Hiwouldn't let it anywhere near the mains Bass/mids/Highs though..
Does that mean you appreciate what DSP does?A lot of audiophiles are stuck in the 40s-70s. The last 45 years of recordings say Hi
The AI agent was correct in its assertion that group delay is the best method for subwoofer integration. It is.Clarification: I am not using DSP. I used AI to interpret the REW measurements and guide me through various ‘setups’ to find an optimum. No DSP was is being used.
But: After I was done and had the subs integrated, it did offer to suggest a series of Parametic EQ settings to tweak things which I accepted In 2 seconds, it provided 10 PEQ adjustments.
Using ROON’s functionality, I have applied all 10 settings. It’s early days and I will need to go back and forth to see if I accept them or not.
If your 360* out of phase? Arn't you in phase?The AI agent was correct in its assertion that group delay is the best method for subwoofer integration. It is.
Adjusting phase over a relatively small range of frequencies while looking at system amplitude response with pink noise creates the opportunity for a 360 out-of-phase situation to measure great in the frequency domain, (a.k.a pink noise spectra) while performing very poorly in the time domain where it counts most.
Human hearing is very time sensitive. Inter-aural time delay is a main contributor to how we localize sounds. 10mSec @ 100 Hz is one 360 degree period, and with subwoofer DSP and group delay it is easy to get there.
Convolution Filters are super powerful and I have dabbled with them. My experience was they are only as good as the target curve you use and how well that matches your desired SQ.Roon users can measure with REW (free) and send the data to a third party to generate convolution filters (reasonably priced). The improvement absolutely dwarfs anything you’ll get from cables, conditioners, streamers, or whatever miracle network switch is trending this week.
Yes, you are in phase, but out timeIf your 360* out of phase? Arn't you in phase?
I can see how timing is the critical element. For clarity. It seems to me, if the timing is correct, the phase is also correct?
Yes, but today many DSP filters can correct both frecuency and time domains issues.Yes, you are in phase, but out time
Let’s say the subwoofer is delayed one full cycle. This is not uncommon. Let’s do 100 Hz to make the math easy. The period of a 100 Hz tone is 10 mSec. The woofer’s output is delayed 10 mSec compared to the mid/tweets. The attack of a kick drum will be heard by the listener at two different times and be softened and blurred.
Quite a few pro audio DSP only correct time. Via delay.Yes, but today many DSP filters can correct both frecuency and time domains issues.
Most pro audio DSP correct both frequency and time. Actually,Quite a few pro audio DSP only correct time. Via delay.
unfortunately 2025 audiophiles are timbre and phase deaf , makes Alexa high end ….A lot of audiophiles are stuck in the 40s-70s. The last 45 years of recordings say Hi
Its not either or …….Here’s why I won’t bother with Pink Noise measurement. I used frequency sweeps from 15hz to 21,000 hz and fed Chat that data.
TL;DR — Sweeps vs Pink Noise
Use REW sweeps. They are far better.
Why sweeps win:
Pink noise is only good for:
- Much more accurate
- Much higher signal-to-noise ratio (especially in the bass)
- Give you phase, impulse, group delay, and timing
- Let you integrate subs and mains properly
- Work consistently and repeatably
Pink noise cannot measure:
- Quick tonal checks
- Listening/voicing
- Very rough level matching
Everything we’ve optimized together requires sweeps. Pink noise can’t do it.
- Group delay
- Phase
- Waterfall/decay
- Sub alignment
- Modal behavior
- Time domain performance
Yes, but today many DSP filters can correct both frecuency and time domains issues.