I need more info to really answer your question. First, what is your system? Second, what do you mean by bright? Are you talking about an emphasis in the 5-8khz range, or do you mean excessive high frequency (>10khz) content? As a rule it's always better to address the root cause of tonal imbalances. My experience is that parametrics are something of a band-aid and of limited effectiveness. Graphic EQs are even less effective.
Parametric / graphic equalizer recommendations
I have decided my system is too bright. Room treatment did not solve the problem so I am looking at equalizers:
dual graphic eq
(car) parametric eq
They have <.01% THD and 95 dB S/N ratio so don't see them hurting signal too much - I hope.
* Are these good brands?
* Do I need dual eq (one for each speaker)or is mono (average of both speakers)okay?
* Is 31 band necessary. Would 10 band be enough?
* Any place I can get an audio parametric eq. and is this better than graphic eq.?
Thanks for any help.
dual graphic eq
(car) parametric eq
They have <.01% THD and 95 dB S/N ratio so don't see them hurting signal too much - I hope.
* Are these good brands?
* Do I need dual eq (one for each speaker)or is mono (average of both speakers)okay?
* Is 31 band necessary. Would 10 band be enough?
* Any place I can get an audio parametric eq. and is this better than graphic eq.?
Thanks for any help.
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- 13 posts total
- 13 posts total