hey folks,
I have recorded my sinus sweeps, white and pink noise in my new control room at 3 points (listening position and rear corners).
Now I have to figure out what frequencies are most disturbing.
I have recorded signals with a Sennheiser MKH 20, a Mackie 824 speaker and the Digi 002 Rack on my powerbook at high volumes, so I think the signal chain is pretty good.
Is there anyone who canm help me to interprete the results?
thx ,
this whol acoustic thing is very new to me,
thx a lot.
eike freese
measured the room, now what?
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David French
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- Location: Indiana
MKH-20 isn't the best choice for doing room measurements, but I'm guessing it will give us a good idea of what's going on... shouldn't be too far off.
If you could send me the original sine sweep file and the versions recorded in your room, I would be happy to help you analyze them, so long as there is a bit of silence at the end of the recordings... if not, my process won't work properly. Email them to me (use the button below this post) and I'll take a look for ya.
If you could send me the original sine sweep file and the versions recorded in your room, I would be happy to help you analyze them, so long as there is a bit of silence at the end of the recordings... if not, my process won't work properly. Email them to me (use the button below this post) and I'll take a look for ya.
David M. French
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Ethan Winer
- Senior Member
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- Location: New Milford, CT, USA
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Re: measured the room, now what?
Eike,
> Is there anyone who canm help me to interprete the results? <
I'm sure you're in good hands with David, and I look forward to seeing what he finds. Allow me to offer a different perspective on this.
As I see it, there are three important reasons for people to measure their room:
1) To understand that they have a problem (many people have no idea how bad their room is).
2) Measuring before and after adding treatment to have hard proof of what was improved after treatment, and by how much.
3) To verify how good their room was made after treating it.
--Ethan
> Is there anyone who canm help me to interprete the results? <
I'm sure you're in good hands with David, and I look forward to seeing what he finds. Allow me to offer a different perspective on this.
As I see it, there are three important reasons for people to measure their room:
1) To understand that they have a problem (many people have no idea how bad their room is).
2) Measuring before and after adding treatment to have hard proof of what was improved after treatment, and by how much.
3) To verify how good their room was made after treating it.
--Ethan
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David French
- Posts: 118
- Joined: Sun Feb 05, 2006 3:09 pm
- Location: Indiana
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Eric_Desart
- Senior Member
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- Location: Antwerp/Belgium
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David French wrote:I use measurement primarily to:
1) gain insight into how much treatment is required and how it should be implemented.
2) aid in the placement of sources and receivers.
3) identify problems that predictive methods may fail to identify.
Best regards - Eric Desart
My posts are never meant to sell whatever incl. myself, neither direct, nor indirect.
My posts are never meant to sell whatever incl. myself, neither direct, nor indirect.
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David French
- Posts: 118
- Joined: Sun Feb 05, 2006 3:09 pm
- Location: Indiana
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Eric_Desart
- Senior Member
- Posts: 760
- Joined: Wed Jun 18, 2003 6:09 pm
- Location: Antwerp/Belgium
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