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Post by Hexspa on Oct 3, 2018 21:07:15 GMT
That's amazing. I love the monitor-on-a-stand idea as well as the slatted table. Don't hold me to this but also consider using a low shelf around 300Hz to take down your lows instead of boosting your highs. As I understand it, you're better off using corrective EQ below your Schroeder Frequency which, for most rooms is around 200Hz.
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Post by gertman34 on Oct 6, 2018 13:14:31 GMT
That's amazing. I love the monitor-on-a-stand idea as well as the slatted table. Don't hold me to this but also consider using a low shelf around 300Hz to take down your lows instead of boosting your highs. As I understand it, you're better off using corrective EQ below your Schroeder Frequency which, for most rooms is around 200Hz. Okay good to know. So the Schroeder Frequency is the frequency at which the room transitions to behaving like a resonator rather than a diffuser? I think maybe I would try to avoid using EQ at all, and work with the curve I have.
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Post by Michael Lawrence on Oct 6, 2018 19:08:18 GMT
Schroeder is best thought of as the approximate point at which we switch from a specular (ray) reflection model in the HF to a wave (water ripple) model in the LF. It's a region, not a single frequency, but yes, more or less.
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