@recluse -- if you want to experiment on a relatively low cost basis, here's an option for you.
Buy a Raspberry Pi 3B+ or 4 ($30 or $40) along with a HiFiBerry DAC+DSP Hat (under $100 and fits on the RPI). A case for the boards, a power supply and an SD card might be another $25. The needed HiFiBerry OS system is a free download. Finally, you'll need a measurement microphone with a USB connection; there are a number of options for $100, give or take.
Set up the RPi/DAC card and use it as a player into a line-level input on your stereo. The HiFiBerry OS has an option where, using the measurement microphone, it will measure the frequency response of your speakers in your room. Once done that'll show you a graph of the response and give you options to make corrections -- bass only or several broader choices.
The OS also has the option to do custom equalizations if you have others ideas in mind.
Obviously this is something that requires a LOT of experimentation, but it gives an effective way to investigate your DSP options without throwing down big bucks.
Buy a Raspberry Pi 3B+ or 4 ($30 or $40) along with a HiFiBerry DAC+DSP Hat (under $100 and fits on the RPI). A case for the boards, a power supply and an SD card might be another $25. The needed HiFiBerry OS system is a free download. Finally, you'll need a measurement microphone with a USB connection; there are a number of options for $100, give or take.
Set up the RPi/DAC card and use it as a player into a line-level input on your stereo. The HiFiBerry OS has an option where, using the measurement microphone, it will measure the frequency response of your speakers in your room. Once done that'll show you a graph of the response and give you options to make corrections -- bass only or several broader choices.
The OS also has the option to do custom equalizations if you have others ideas in mind.
Obviously this is something that requires a LOT of experimentation, but it gives an effective way to investigate your DSP options without throwing down big bucks.