Yeah, pretty much, except you need to make a small text file with notepad (called housecurve.txt or whatever) that you point to with the settings icon in the housecurve tab. The file will alter the standard target you choose with the parameters in the file. You can play around with a bunch of different curves to end up with the one you want. Do this before you even start measuring. The housecurve will load every time you start REW just like any cal file.
In my plot above I used two entries. I started the house curve at 80Hz (the crossover) with a zero. Then I raised the level by +5db up to 30Hz. That's it. You can do anything you want with as many entries as you want. Play around with it.
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The other question is what level do you then use when you calibrate your sub to fit with your mains? I assume you aim to have say 50hz to be at 75dB while letting the lower end run hot?
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Hehehe, that's up to you. If you're a normal guy, you will have the mains meet the sub at an even level and then the house curve rises from there. You can be a maniac (like myself) and run the sub hot. I listen at very reasonable levels, so I like a hot sub....
Wanna see it? I like how it sounds, but that's just me. My point is, there is no correct answer.
FULL_RANGE_WITH_FILTERS.jpg
brucek