hi Lewinskih01,
yes, with some engineering proof, that's what I was trying to say. And, the reason that seemed to make sense to me is that signal processing is happening correctly, real-time thru the passive x-over components without any intervention by a human-being. In a time-coherent loudspeaker with passive x-overs, drivers with "good properties" have already been selected & the x-over designed around them & the whole system would be working to benefit the user.
With digital x-overs the correction is as good as the skill of the user to characterize the drivers & to come up with the appropriate filter response to yield a time-coherent delivery. And, from reading Roy's letter to Six Moons - the link to which he provided earlier on - it's no easy feat to characterize a driver in the room. One cannot use 1 type of test tone, one needs to use many different types. And, one needs to measure the driver response in many ways to get an accurate characterization of the driver. Otherwise, the DEQX or Acourate correction will be (very) limited leading to less than stellar benefits.
I don't think that Roy can tell you how well DEQX or Acourate will solve your problem because the answer lies in how skilled you are in understanding the science behind how the driver response is affected by your room,
how skilled you are in DSP algorithms to come up with a filter that corrects for your room & your particular choice of drivers
how skilled you are in understanding the science behind reflections of drivers off the front baffle,
how skilled you are in understanding what the requirements are for selecting a microphone to do the driver characterization,
how skilled you are in compensating for this mic's own frequency response so that you don't misunderstand the mic's response to be that of your driver's,
etc, etc.
My understanding is that if you room correct like HT Receivers do & plug in the correction into some pre-designed filter in the software, you'll get a correction that's average at best & you might not like the results.
The thing that Roy has been saying all along is that we don't listen to test tones (which is what the room correction tones are) - we listen to music which is a bunch of partial wavelengths of various frequencies.
You use full cycle tones to characterize the driver then do the correction & then play partial wavelengths of various frequencies thru that driver - the correction to the driver, in my understanding, is invalid.
Of course, I could be totally off-base here....
FWIW.
yes, with some engineering proof, that's what I was trying to say. And, the reason that seemed to make sense to me is that signal processing is happening correctly, real-time thru the passive x-over components without any intervention by a human-being. In a time-coherent loudspeaker with passive x-overs, drivers with "good properties" have already been selected & the x-over designed around them & the whole system would be working to benefit the user.
With digital x-overs the correction is as good as the skill of the user to characterize the drivers & to come up with the appropriate filter response to yield a time-coherent delivery. And, from reading Roy's letter to Six Moons - the link to which he provided earlier on - it's no easy feat to characterize a driver in the room. One cannot use 1 type of test tone, one needs to use many different types. And, one needs to measure the driver response in many ways to get an accurate characterization of the driver. Otherwise, the DEQX or Acourate correction will be (very) limited leading to less than stellar benefits.
I don't think that Roy can tell you how well DEQX or Acourate will solve your problem because the answer lies in how skilled you are in understanding the science behind how the driver response is affected by your room,
how skilled you are in DSP algorithms to come up with a filter that corrects for your room & your particular choice of drivers
how skilled you are in understanding the science behind reflections of drivers off the front baffle,
how skilled you are in understanding what the requirements are for selecting a microphone to do the driver characterization,
how skilled you are in compensating for this mic's own frequency response so that you don't misunderstand the mic's response to be that of your driver's,
etc, etc.
My understanding is that if you room correct like HT Receivers do & plug in the correction into some pre-designed filter in the software, you'll get a correction that's average at best & you might not like the results.
The thing that Roy has been saying all along is that we don't listen to test tones (which is what the room correction tones are) - we listen to music which is a bunch of partial wavelengths of various frequencies.
You use full cycle tones to characterize the driver then do the correction & then play partial wavelengths of various frequencies thru that driver - the correction to the driver, in my understanding, is invalid.
Of course, I could be totally off-base here....
FWIW.