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Is the film industry's X curve suitable for home theater?

54K views 38 replies 10 participants last post by  Cam Man  
I read the X-curve explanation, and was surprised: The X-curve is the exact "house curve" I used equalizing sound reinforcement systems in auditoriums, churches and similar venues in 1973. I actually had no idea the movie industry was using it. It was credited to Altec-Lansing at the time. (Whoops, the A7 was the Voice of the Theater, wasn't it?)

Anyway, I experimented with the house, err, X-curve on numerous occasions, probably all occasions I used it. I found that trying to raise the high end of the curve produced a rather harsh and bright sounding sound reinforcement, with accentuated sibilant sounds. It also tended to blow out tweeters. The high frequencies also beamed a lot, and one could point to the location of the tweeter horn, or multi-sectoral midrange if there was no tweeter. The relaxed X-curve provided a system where the electronic speakers could disappear, and the sound appeared to come from the human speaker. Providing high frequencies across long distances in an auditorium is never easy, because humid air is an acoustic low pass filter. The near seats would get a very "hot" signal, and the far seats would still have a roll off of the treble frequencies. The X-curve roll off mitigated that problem and gave everybody the same signal.

The low frequencies were rolled off to avoid problems with HVAC equipment. You haven't suffered until you've had to deal with air moving rumbles and ductwork resonances. I also thought the systems sounded pretty boomy if we tried to raise the low end below the 63 Hz third octave band. Once again, the booms may have been unlined ducts.

None of this translates well to a stereo or HT system in somebody's den. The tweeter may be 12 feet from your ear, and getting a flat curve is pretty easy.
 
"You haven't suffered..." :rofl: Hilarious!

Seriously, it's really interesting to hear of your real-world experience and the effects of EQ in sound reinforcement systems.
Yuck it up, yuck it up, guys. We did it all without a single computer. I drew the eq graphs by hand. The equipment was a General Radio third octave analyzer and pink noise generator. Not MLS, real pink noise. The filters where 1/3 octave plug-ins. Passive. Later we got a strip chart recorder. It took minutes to sweep room, not seconds. By the time we got to finding HVAC resonances, it was 2 AM, and I just wanted to go home. You push a button and in two minutes have amultipoint eq. Woosses.