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| REW Forum Preparing for REW+BFDDiscuss Preparing for REW+BFD in the Subwoofer Equalization | Calibration forum; Preparing for REW+BFD In seeking out the best place for my subwoofer (i.e. the one that will require the least amount of ... |
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| Preparing for REW+BFD In seeking out the best place for my subwoofer (i.e. the one that will require the least amount of EQ with the BFD), I was planning on putting my sub onto my couch and taking REW measurements at potential locations for the subwoofer. However, where should I be placing the sound meter while doing this? I have a 12" downfiring subwoofer, so should the sound meter be placed on the floor, or 1" off the floor where the cone of the subwoofer normally rests? Within the next few days, this thread will be turned into my REW measurements thread, once my BFD arrives ![]() -Jason | |||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Thanks for the reply Wayne. Keep your eyes peeled for what hopefully turns out to be decent pre-EQ waterfalls ![]() Also, is it possible to place the BFD directly on a wooden shelf as I asked in this thread here: http://www.hometheatershack.com/foru...html#post74968 My concern stems from the fact this is a rackmount device usually, but I've *never* used such equipment before and do not know if the chassis of the product is expected to be in a rackmount setup, or whether or not I would be posing any sort of a grounding/fire/safety hazard in placing it directly on the wooden shelf. -Jason | |||
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| | Re: Preparing for REW+BFD The rack-mounting feature basically means the unit is designed so that it can be fully supported by its faceplate. But it doesn’t have to be used that way. You can locate the BFD anywhere that suits your needs. You might want to add some stick-on rubber feet to the underside, since it doesn’t have any, to avoid scuffing your wood shelf. http://www.radioshack.com/product/in...entPage=search Regards, Wayne | |||
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| | Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Quote:
Tim ![]() He drove a black and white pirate ship at 190 mph. - Dale in the #3 will never be forgotten. Thanks for the memories. | ||||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Here are my REW graphs for 4 sub positions. I was unable to get the input volume higher than -22dB during actual measurements. The measured -3dB according to JBL of my sub is 25Hz, but my graphs are way worse than that? ![]() How 'bad' do these actually appear? Subwoofer only was measured, the mains were completely disconnected. | |||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Quote:
Or you can measure at 80dB to increase the input level. Quote:
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BTW, if you want your filters to be sequencial, there is a "sort" button on the filter pop-up screen. Overall the response looks great for a sub with a cutiff around 35Hz. It's nice to see at least one raw measure to evaluate better. brucek | ||||||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Those were raw feeds directly into the AUX connection of my Onkyo TXSR705. I had disabled Audyssey entirely before running these tests. Hopefully later today once my neighbors are gone I can run some more measurements, specifically the near-field one you asked for. (I live in a condo and as I'm sure you know, REW measuring is rather loud )I'm rather confused about two things however. 1) Why is it my internal measurements/calibrations are just fine as far as signal levels, yet when I go to make an actual measurement, the levels are way low, despite not changing *anything* between the internal checks and measuring. (I understand I can change the sensitivity of the sound meter, but it was already set to 80, which I thought was appropriate?) 2) The cabling I have is mini-stereo line out to dual RCA, converted to single RCA at the receiver end and input via the Right AUX channel. From the sound meter I have a Right-only RCA connected, going to the Right-only AUX2 connection on my X-Fi Platinum (which in this case is using an RCA line-level input on the front panel). Is this correct, or should the sound meter output be converted into a dual-mono signal? | |||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Quote:
The Check Levels routine in the the Settings screen uses the fact that you have the Check/Set levels with Subwoofer pull-down selected to generate its test noise. It uses a pink noise low cut of 30Hz and a high cut of 80Hz. This is the energy band that you use to set the Check Levels in the settings screen. See the first attached pic below. But then to double check and verify that the end frequency of the sweep that you have selected in the Measurement panel matches that subwoofer setting, its Check Level routine uses the end frequency as the test pink noise hi-limit cutoff. So if you had 20KHz as the end frequency to measure for your sweep, you can see how the pink noise would be different (between the two Check Levels) and as such you would experience quite a different level. See the second attached pic where 200Hz is the end frequency and the hi-cut of the pink noise is 200Hz. In this case there will be a small difference in the check level result. Set the End Frequency in the Measurement panel to 200Hz.................. it should be fine..... check_levels_settings.jpg check_levels_measure.jpg Quote:
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Then you use one of those broken out channels for the line-in from the mic and the line-out to the receiver. I use a Y-splitter at the receiver to feed left and right AUX in so I can have both mains playing when the time comes - but whatever.... ![]() brucek | ||||||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Ok, here is a near-field measurement from the middle of my living room. Below the first graph (near-field) is a measurement from the left of the fireplace next to the dart throw-line. The purple dotted line is what I'd like to correct it to if that will not damage the subwoofer. Below the purple graph is the waterfall from the current default position near my television. I appear to have the dreaded 'hum' problem? However it's only noticeable at high volumes so...hrm. **EDIT** Nevermind about the hum...it was my coax (television) cable being routed into the surge protector that was causing it. Last edited by Trekari : 01-26-08 at 05:36 PM. | |||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Quote:
brucek | ||||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD I guess I should hold off on purchasing a duplicate PB12 to get better sub response . The product literature doesn't specify a -3dB frequency, it simply states the frequency response is 25Hz-crossover setting.After all this excitement with BFDs and REWs and HCFRs and $$$$ I come to find out my subwoofer, which I used to think was fairly good, is just crap at frequency response :'( At least I have Comcast coming out tomorrow to fix their grounding problem for free ![]() -Jason | |||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Quote:
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Wouldn't it add volume at the lower frequencies? Basically I would've been able to make more filters (cuts) on the range that is already reproduced appropriately, but the second sub would've added a few dB to the lower frequency range that the single sub currently drops off at. Anyway...I'm impulsive and am looking into a much improved sub anyway ![]() | |||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD If you had ten subs that dropped off at 35Hz, the response would still drop off at 35Hz...... Buy a sub that extends to 15Hz and you'll be happy... ![]() brucek | |||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Quote:
It wasn't clear to me how Trekari put his sub in the listening position. I would think it would need to be upside down (it's down firing) and sitting on something to put the sound power out about where the head is positioned. Was that the case? Sitting lower, the sofa/chair would soak up some SPL and change the pattern. Harrison | ||||
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| Re: Preparing for REW+BFD Actually I resorted to simply moving the subwoofer with the sound meter on a tripod at the couch. However, having my delusions destroyed by seeing a frequency response graph of my subwoofer has made me decide I needed a better one anyways. http://www.av123.com/products_produc...s&product=15.1 ![]() Calling tomorrow to see about ordering one of those. Other than that, my horrible hum has no solution. The cable company was here today and checked the outside ground (with me present) and even took a file and cleaned up all the connections from the ground block down the copper cable and into the earth stake. My hum still exists without cheater plugs if the coax cable is plugged in. It makes no difference if I have the coax going into the surge supressor first and then to the tv or not. I was thinking that one of these http://www.cs1.net/cables/products/j...rs/VRD-1FF.htm put on the main coax line into my condo (right before the cable splitter sends the signal to all the rooms), would solve the problem in all rooms? Any other advice to offer since the hum ONLY exists when coax is connected? | |||
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