Thank you all again for the useful input.
I got my Radio Shack SPL meter (analog), a Stereophile Test CD 2, and got the RS SPL correction curves from Rives. All set! Today I had fun measuring and would very much appreciate your help in making sense out of the readings. For the record, I followed Rives' instructions and set up the meter in a tripod exactly where I sit, mic facing ahead and right in between the speakers, and adjusted the volume so that a 1kHz signal would be read at 0 dB. BTW speakers are 6.6 feet apart and I sit at 11.6 ft from either one of them. Both speakers are 5 feet away from the side walls and about 15 feet away from the back wall (yes, 15 ft; not a typo).
I can't find a way to post a graph here, so I'm posting a table of the measurements after the correction had been made (sorry it's so painful to read):
Hz -------- dB
<20.........no test tracks available
20..........-6.5
25..........-1.0
31.5........ 5.0
40.......... 2.5
50..........-2.5
63.......... 2.0
80.......... 3.5
100.........-0.8
125.........-2.5
160.........-1.5
200.........-2.7
250.........-4.5
315.........-3.0
400.........-3.5
500.........-2.0
630.........-1.0
800......... 1.0
1000........-0.5
1250........-1.0
1600........-1.5
2000........-4.5
2500........-5.5
3150........-6.5
4000........-5.0
5000........-0.5
6300........ 1.0
8000........-2.0
10000.......-9.0
12500.......-17.5
16000.......-20.0
20000.......-21.0
First thing that caught my attention is the huge drop above 10kHz. Maybe the system can't deliver? BTW system is made of B&W 804s + McIntosh MC275 + Rotel pre + Rotel CD player.
The low point at 20 Hz isn't surprising, as the 804s can't deliver that kind of bass. I'm looking at getting a sub, but that's a different story.
The 804s have their crossover frequencies at 350 Hz and 4 kHz, so I guess the troughs near those points are not to worry much about...I guess. However the one on the higher frequencies starts around 2 kHz and extends all the way to 4 kHz, so I'm second guessing if I should worry about it or not.
It seems to me I should focus on the peaks at 31.5 and 80 Hz. Should I worry about what's going on at 800 Hz or 6.3 kHz?
What am I missing? How should I move forward?
This is fun, even though now Im officially a freak (my wife came by today when I was playing the warble tones and said yeap you ARE an audio freak. Oh well its fun nonetheless!
Thank you!!
Horacio
I got my Radio Shack SPL meter (analog), a Stereophile Test CD 2, and got the RS SPL correction curves from Rives. All set! Today I had fun measuring and would very much appreciate your help in making sense out of the readings. For the record, I followed Rives' instructions and set up the meter in a tripod exactly where I sit, mic facing ahead and right in between the speakers, and adjusted the volume so that a 1kHz signal would be read at 0 dB. BTW speakers are 6.6 feet apart and I sit at 11.6 ft from either one of them. Both speakers are 5 feet away from the side walls and about 15 feet away from the back wall (yes, 15 ft; not a typo).
I can't find a way to post a graph here, so I'm posting a table of the measurements after the correction had been made (sorry it's so painful to read):
Hz -------- dB
<20.........no test tracks available
20..........-6.5
25..........-1.0
31.5........ 5.0
40.......... 2.5
50..........-2.5
63.......... 2.0
80.......... 3.5
100.........-0.8
125.........-2.5
160.........-1.5
200.........-2.7
250.........-4.5
315.........-3.0
400.........-3.5
500.........-2.0
630.........-1.0
800......... 1.0
1000........-0.5
1250........-1.0
1600........-1.5
2000........-4.5
2500........-5.5
3150........-6.5
4000........-5.0
5000........-0.5
6300........ 1.0
8000........-2.0
10000.......-9.0
12500.......-17.5
16000.......-20.0
20000.......-21.0
First thing that caught my attention is the huge drop above 10kHz. Maybe the system can't deliver? BTW system is made of B&W 804s + McIntosh MC275 + Rotel pre + Rotel CD player.
The low point at 20 Hz isn't surprising, as the 804s can't deliver that kind of bass. I'm looking at getting a sub, but that's a different story.
The 804s have their crossover frequencies at 350 Hz and 4 kHz, so I guess the troughs near those points are not to worry much about...I guess. However the one on the higher frequencies starts around 2 kHz and extends all the way to 4 kHz, so I'm second guessing if I should worry about it or not.
It seems to me I should focus on the peaks at 31.5 and 80 Hz. Should I worry about what's going on at 800 Hz or 6.3 kHz?
What am I missing? How should I move forward?
This is fun, even though now Im officially a freak (my wife came by today when I was playing the warble tones and said yeap you ARE an audio freak. Oh well its fun nonetheless!
Thank you!!
Horacio