Soundman2020 wrote:Hmmm.... And you live in Australia, where power is 50 Hz....
I'm thinking "Mains Hum".... Did you use a properly wired cable for that? Everything correctly grounded?
This is a fault in the SPL meter itself Stuart. Battery powered. I plugged a pair of headphones in to it and there was a load of noise coming out of it which was almost louder than the mic signal itself.
Soundman2020 wrote:Just checking, but did you have the U89 on omni for those tests?
Good question, and without looking I'm going to say it was cardiod as we were using it for vocals last. I'll double check that but I'll redo the test in omni if not.
Soundman2020 wrote:OK, looking at the REW data, there are several puzzling things there: First, either you didn't do the calibration correctly against a sound level meter, or your room and system are amazingly, astoundingly quiet! According to your graphs, you did those tests at about 55 dB, meaning your RT-60 measurements went down to -5 dB
I'd re-check the calibration of REW against an accurate SLM. You should do the tests with each individual speaker giving you around 80 dB on both the REW meter and your SLM, so both together should give you about 86 dB.
I'll check that out as I'm pretty sure i'll be doing the test again using the omni pattern anyway. I probably didn't go through the calibration process properly as I was thinking about a dozen other things at the time. Your right, I probably did run it too quiet
Soundman2020 wrote:Next, the readings from Left and Right speakers are very, very different. Almost like it was two physically different speakers. There's a difference of around 4 to 15 dB at all points across the spectrum, with L being higher in some places but R in others: Perhaps something changed in the room between doing the L and R readings? Maybe you yourself were in a different place, or you moved the sofa, desk etc.? Another curiosity: summing the L and R SPL curves does not match the "Stereo" curve. Or rather, it does match in the low end, up to about 2 kHz, but above that it just goes wild. I would try to figure out why the two are so different. The L and R curves should be at practically the same level, showing more or less the same thing (except for minor variations due to asymmetry in the room), and the reading with both speakers on should be consistently about 5 or 6 dB louder across the board.
Look's like i'm running the test again so i'll pay particular attention to the making sure the L and R tests are repeated the same way. Like I say, I was doing a bunch of other stuff at the time so it wouldn't surprise me if something got moved, a door got opened etc etc.
Soundman2020 wrote:Next, it looks like you overdid the baffle step compensation. On all the graphs, there's a consistent drop of about 4 dB below 120 Hz. How do you have the controls set on the rear of your speakers? Are you using a sub? Are you using anything else that could be shaping the frequency response, such as a graphic equalizer, or a crossover?
No sub, no EQ, no crossover. As the monitors are now soffit mounted I can't make a 100% certain call on the settings
....but, I do remeber setting everything to as flat/unaltered as it would go. I hope nothing got tweaked/knocked/switched when I put them in or it could be a long and tedious process to get them out and have a look
Soundman2020 wrote:The good news is that the room seems to be behaving very nicely!
To be honest Stuart, it really sounds excellent to me in the room. Nothing really appears to be jumping out in the mix too much as you move around the room (except the bass when you get to the back of the room). So i'd have to say i've done something a little skewed in my measurments. I'll repeat the process with more attention to detail and re-post.
quick, cheap or good....pick any two.