The analog is more useful to me since I can get a better sense for the relative rate and amount of change in db during a test. It is the same reason auto makers finally backed off on digital dash guages. They just don't convey the data as usefully.
SPL METER? ATI OR RADIO SHACK
I am looking for an SPL meter for speaker placement and room acoustic information. I know radio shack makes one, and I have seen an ATI SLM 100 advertised on the net and
Music Direct also sells it. Does anybody have a personal experience with either. I am looking to spend within the $100.00 range, but of course looking for one that is reasonably accurate. All opinions would be welcome
Music Direct also sells it. Does anybody have a personal experience with either. I am looking to spend within the $100.00 range, but of course looking for one that is reasonably accurate. All opinions would be welcome
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- 17 posts total
I played around with the RS meter and the Rives CD. It was a lot of work, and hard to be sure of results. So I went looking for a spectrum analyser. Couldn't find one for less than two grand...until I stumbled over the Behringer DEQ2496. The spectrum analyser is much better and easier to use than the meter/test disc, and the equalization function, if you want to use it (and you will) effectively fixes room resonance problems. It will cost you about $350, including microphone. Worth every penny. Take it from one who has lots of experience with the RS meter. I think that the RS meter was never intended to calibrate audio systems. It is a good tool for measuring how loud your neighbor's lawn mower is, or how noisy his party is at 2AM. |
If you're seriously interested in your room's acoustics I'd suggest that you invest in a copy of the awesomely powerful ETF 5 acoustic measurement software. It runs on any Windows PC with a duplex sound card. ETF can do frequency response measurements of your speakers down to 1/12 octave divisions, MLS measurements, RT60 measurements, and a lot more. Like those cool waterfall plots in Stereophile's speaker tests? ETF can do those too. You can use the RS SPL meter as a microphone and the author of ETF can supply a correction file to offset the RS meter's known inaccuracies. For only $150 ETF 5 is a steal. |
Is there any reason to buy the old version (33-2050) off eBay when Radio Shack now offers this new analog model: http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2103668&cp=2032057.2032187.2032193.2032222&parentPage=family Also, Nady has a current model that looks identical to the old RS version: http://www.nady.com/products/product_pgs/SPLmeters_pg2.html and can be had for $35 new. Has anyone used this one and is it interchangeable with the RS 33-2050? So many choices... David |
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