Mijo - measure and listen, not that difficult
you missed the essential point " rest of chain "
time and phase are just part of the magic since 1977....
The human ear brain processing can differentiate between the initial primary sound and the reflected sounds so long as there is enough time between those sounds. Something that microphones are challenged to do. Which is not to say that microphones and the measurements they gather are not important. Just the opposite. The vast majority of manufacturers of time coherent loudspeakers recommend pulling their loudspeakers out from nearby walls for this very reason. Those time coherent loudspeakers that are meant to be placed in, on or near the wall are designed with an understanding of the unique predictability of the affects of this proximity that would not otherwise be available with all the differing variables of users placement and variables of users rooms, and compensation is built in accordingly.
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not debating that point (starting point, reference point) - my statement refers to aiming for a perfectly flat measured speaker response as a sonic end point |
So true. I once challenged a dipole mic, which sound came first? Said it could go either way. The condenser mic would only say, "No." The omni of course gave a much longer answer, "Yes." Tried a tube mic, pretended at first not to hear me then started glowing red hot. So I gave up, and haven't challenged one since.
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