How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#1

Postby Soundman2020 » Fri, 2019-Sep-20, 23:00

How To Calibrate and Use REW
To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics


REW is a free acoustic analysis package, and is actually a lot better than some of the packages that cost money.

REW stands for "Room EQ Wizard", and you can find it here: https://www.roomeqwizard.com/

In short, it's amazing (and even more amazing that it is FREE!) I highly recommend it. It's what I use for pretty much all my acoustic testing these days.

But in order to get useful information from it, you need to first calibrate it, and use it correctly. Below is the series of steps that I use with my clients to set up and use REW in the most meaningful way. If you want me to analyze your data, then please follow these instructions carefully. If you post REW data here on the forum that shows you clearly didn't follow this procedure, then please don't expect a reply. It's not hard to do.


SOUNDMAN PROCEDURE FOR CALIBRATING R.E.W.
(prepared by Stuart Allsop - a.k.a "Soundman2020")
(updated July 2021)
____________________________



What you will need:

Computer and interface: You will need a computer capable of running REW, obviously! The computer will need a decent quality audio interface of some type for connecting your mic and speakers, and the REW manual refers to this as the "sound card". That might be a physical card inside your computer, or it might be an external box connected by USB, Firewire ( :shock: ), or some proprietary connection. It will have at least two output channels for connecting to your speakers (either directly, or via your DAW), and it will have at least one input channel, for connecting to your acoustic measurement mic (either directly, or via your DAW).

Acoustic measurement mic: Use only a proper acoustic measurement mic for these tests! If you don't have one, go buy one. There is no substitute. You cannot use a typical directional vocal or instrument mic, or a mic that does not have flat response across the spectrum. It must be an omnidirectional mic with flat response. So if you used an SM58 or U47 or C1000 for your tests already, throw the data away, get a proper mic, and do it again.

A typical acoustic measurement mic:
acoustic-mic-07.JPG
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acoustic-mic-07.JPG
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Which mic should you buy? I do NOT recommend the Behringer ECM8000 mic for this, as I've heard too many sad stories about people getting faulty mics, including my own personal experience. I have several mics, but the one I use for most testing is a simple, inexpensive PreSonus PRM-1. Other good ones are the dbx RTA-M, Audix TM-1, Nady CM-100, Beyerdynamic MM1, Dayton EMM-6, and if you really feel like blowing a lot of money, then get an Earthworks M30 (you can buy all of the others together for about the same price as a single M30...) There are some USB mics that supposedly don't need calibrating, but I'm still on the fence about those.... not convinced at all. I prefer a "real" mic with a "proper" XLR connector on the back... One reason for this is the need to move the mic around the room... if it is tethered to the computer with a USB cable, which can only be a few feet (meter or so) long, then you have a problem... How do you move the mic without also moving the DAW?

A good mic will cost you maybe around US$ 100 or so (2022 prices).

If you have more than one measurement mic, then always use the exact same one for all of your testing, otherwise you will not be able to validly compare tests.

Sound level meter: Yes you do need a proper, real, good quality hand-held sound level meter to do this. NOT an app on your iPhone. (Don't get me started on why that's a bad idea....) If you are building a studio, then the cost of a good sound level meter is peanuts, compared to what you spend on everything else. It costs less than half a dozen sheets of drywall! DO NOT GET A CHEAP CHINESE JUNK METER! Those go for under US$ 50, and they are nothing but toys. A good meter will cost you around the same as a good mic: in the region of US$ 100 (2022 prices). Good meters: Extech (eg. model 407730 or 407732), Galaxy, Phonic (Eg. PAA-2 or PAA-3), Reed Instruments, B&K, some Triplett, NTI if you have a lot of money, etc.

A typical sound level meter:
Extech-407732-sound-level-meter-360.jpg
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Hearing Protection: The test signals can get pretty loud if there's a strong modal response in the room to some frequencies, and they don't sound very nice anyway, so it's a good idea to have something handy to protect your hearing. Typical "ear defender" headphone type protectors work very well, and so do the small "ear bud" type foam plugs. Whatever it is you get, make sure that it provides at least 20 dB of protection, and 30 dB would be better. And make sure you use it, every time you test.

Typical headphone type "ear defender" hearing protection:
hearing-protection-headphones-ear-defender.jpg
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hearing-protection-headphones-ear-defender.jpg
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Typical "ear bud" type hearing protection:
61247_earplugs_00.jpg
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61247_earplugs_00.jpg
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OK, so that's what you'll need (in addition to your speakers, cables, a mic stand, and some common sense!).

Now here's how to do the calibration and first test in your empty room.

CALIBRATION

1. Gear setup: Make sure that all EQ controls on your entire signal chain (including your speakers, console, DAW, mic pre-amp, speaker controller, etc.) are set totally flat. Also make sure that there is no compression, delay, or other effect applied anywhere, and that the gain structure is correctly set at the input and output of every piece of equipment in the complete signal chain, at –20 dbFS (for digital gear) or 0 dBVU (for analog gear).


2. Calibrate REW to your DAW sound card: There's a procedure in the REW manual for doing this: In REW, go to "help" --> "show help", click on the magnifying glass icon, and type in "Calibrating the Soundcard". Follow those instructions to generate a calibration file. Make sure you always use that calibration file, and that it is included in your MDAT file when you upload it.

(Be careful here: Some people who should know better might try to tell you that you can skip this step: that it is not necessary. Wrong! While it is true that the vast majority of modern sound-cards do not actually need this calibration file, since their response is almost always very flat, that does NOT mean that you can skip this. It is still important to do the procedure, because it will highlight any errors you might have in your setup. If the result is NOT flat, or very close to flat, then that indicates that you did something wrong.

When you are done with that, disconnect the loopback and connect your two main speakers to the output channels, and connect your measurement mic to the input channel.


3. Calibrate REW to the real sound levels: This is important, even though the REW manual says it isn't. If you don't calibrate REW, the absolute SPL levels on your graphs will be wrong, and I won't be very interested in helping you analyze them... (I have several standard settings that I use for viewing REW data. If I use those to look at your data, and if your data is in the wrong place, I won't be able to see it or analyze it. I would have to change my settings. And yes, that IS a big deal: I have thousands of REW data sets on my computer, from many, many dozens of studios, and if your data does not conform to that, then I'm not going to mess up my settings to try to match your data...)

Go to the PREFERENCES menu in REW, click on the "Soundcard" tab, and make sure you have the correct device and channel selected for both input and output. Just below that, there are several controls for setting levels. Make sure the "Invert" and "High Pass" boxes are NOT selected, and that the "sweep level" is set to -12.

Like this:
REW-pref-soundcard-menu-setup-3.jpg




About half way down the page, there's a heading that says "Levels". Make sure that is set to "Use main speakers to check/set levels". Click on the "Check Levels" button next to that, then click on "Next".

REW-pref-soundcard-menu-set-levels-out-2.jpg

It should start playing pink noise through both speakers, and you should see the "Out" meter showing a level of -12 and the "In" meter showing about -18, like this:

REW-pref-soundcard-menu-set-levels-3.jpg


Turn off the left speaker, so that ONLY the right speaker is playing. Get out your hand-held sound level meter (I'll call it the "HH meter" from here on), select "C" weighting and "Slow" response.

While REW is playing out that pink-noise test signal, use your HH meter (set to "C" and "Slow") to measure the level at the place where the measurement mic will be (ie, where you head will normally be while mixing), and turn up or down the volume control for the right speaker until your HH meter is showing 80 dB. Now turn off the right speaker, turn on the left speaker, and adjust that speaker until it is also showing 80 dB on the HH meter. It's hard to calibrate with pink noise, since it varies a bit, and there are also limitations on how accurately low frequencies can be measured, but do try to get this as accurate as you possibly can.

Yes, I know that the REW manual says to use 70 dB, but I prefer 80 dBC to make sure that there's a good signal to noise ratio, and that all of the room modes are triggered. If your level is too low, the data will be "dirty", and there might not be enough headroom to do decent analysis. Also, if your level is too low, it won't necessarily trigger all of the modes in the room at a decent level.

Click "Finish" and close the Preferences menu.

Now place your measurement mic at the mix position, in a good, firm, steady mic stand that won’t move during the tests. Set up the mic on its stand exactly where your head will be when you are mixing normally, on the room center line, directly above your chair, facing straight forwards and slanted a bit upwards, angled around 70° up. (Yes, I know that some people say to point it straight up, and others say to point it forwards, or at 45°, or at the speaker, but I'm not them, and there are very good reasons for me suggesting 70° for this test. I'm not going to go into them here, but if you want me to analyze your data, then please use 70°. (It doesn't need to be exact: just somewhere around 60° to 75°).

Click on the "SPL Meter" icon at the top of the REW screen: another window opens, with an SPL meter in it. Make sure that the buttons under the display are set to "SPL", and "C" and "S". Like this:

REW-SPL-calibration-setup-2.jpg


Click on "Calibrate". A window opens asking you to select the signal source: Set it to "Use REW speaker cal signal", and click "accept". Like this:

REW-SPL-calibration-setup-signal-select-8.jpg


It starts playing pink noise again, and another window appears, titled "SPL Reading Calibration". Using your HH meter confirm that the level coming from your left speaker alone (right speaker turned off) is still producing 80 dB. Adjust the volume control on the speaker if necessary to get as close as possible to 80.0 dB on the hand-held meter, then double-click the number in the REW meter calibration box, change that number to "80.0", then click finished. Like this:

REW-SPL-calibration-setup-signal-6.jpg


REW then tells you something about the maximum level that it can measure with this calibration setup:

REW-SPL-calibration-setup-max-lvl-7.jpg


Click "OK". Close the SPL meter window.

That's it. You have fully calibrated REW.


BASELINE TEST

4. Make the measurements: With the same setup as for the previous step (do not change any settings at all from here on! Make a careful note of exactly where you have all the manual controls on your DAW, console, pre-amp, and everything else in the signal chain, so you can set them back to the exact same place in the future.), click on the "Measure" button in the top left corner of the REW screen. It opens another window, titled "Make a Measurement". Check that it is set to "SPL" (not "Impedance").

Makes sure that "Start Freq" is set to 10, "End Freq" is set to 22,000, "Level" is set to -12dB, "Length" is set to 256k, and "Repetitions" is set to 2
(NOTE: On older versions of REW, "Repetitions" was called "Sweeps". It's the same thing with a different name).
(NOTE: With some configurations, the "Sweeps" / "Repetitions" value will be grayed out and set to 1, so you will not be able to change it. For example, if you have a USB mic, or if you use "Acoustic timing reference").

That window looks like this, for newer versions of REW. (If you have an older versions the window for that is shown further down, below this one.)
REW-calibration-and-testing-procedure-New-Meausrement-Screen-5.jpg



Below is the old-style measurement window, from versions of REW prior to May 2019:
REW-Measurement-setup-2.jpg



THE ABOVE IS IMPORTANT! If you post data that does NOT start at 10 Hz and end at 22 kHz, then don't expect me to help you analyze it.

Click on "Check Levels". It should play pink noise for a few seconds, and you should see the output meter jump to "-12", and the input meters should show a reading of somewhere between 0 and -20. After a few seconds, it stops playing the pink noise, then tells you what the level was, with a message saying if it was too high (clipping), too low, or OK to proceed. You might need to adjust the mic preamp gain or speaker levels to get that correct. If so you will have to repeat the above calibration procedure from step 3 onward.

For the actual measurement sweep, get out of the room while that runs! Yes, your body can affect the measurements, which is why REW has a feature for dealing with that.... Set the "Delay" option (called “Start Delay” in older versions) to several seconds, enough time for you to get out of the room and close the door, plus an additional 5 seconds for the room to settle down. In other words, if you need eight seconds to walk out of the room and close the door, then set the "start delay" number to 13 seconds.

Like this (RECENT VERSIONS OF REW):
REW-calibration-and-testing-procedure-New-Meausrement-Screen-6.jpg


OLDER VERSIONS OF REW:
REW-Measurement-setup-3.jpg



Click "Start" at the bottom of the screen (which was called "Start Measuring" in older versions of REW), leave the room, close the door, and wait for the test to complete fully.

When you get back in, the first thing you need to do is to name the test! In the name box at the top of that test measurement (left hand column of the REW screen), type in the name: "L-- Baseline ", . . . . . LIKE THIS:

REW-Measurement-L--Baseline-2.jpg


Do not name the measurements using the text box below the thumbnail! You can add extra information in the text box if you want, such as the treatment that you added to the room just before this test, but the name of the test MUST go in the tab at the top right of the thumbnail.

Then turn off the left speaker, turn on the right, and repeat the measurement step above. Do not change any settings! Once again, leave the room while the test runs. Name that measurement as "R-- Baseline ".

REW-Measurement-R--Baseline-3.jpg


Then turn on the left speaker again, do one more measurement (with you outside the room), and name that one "LR- Baseline ".

REW-Measurement-LR-Baseline-3.jpg


Please makes sure that you arrange the tests in this exact order! Fist the "L--" test, then the "R--" test, then the "LR-" test. If you did the tests in the wrong order, you can fix that BEFORE you send me the file: REW allows you to drag each measurement up or down in that window. The reason I ask you to keep them in this order, is because that's the order I analyze them in, and also because I get many, many test results from many people: if I have to drag the tests around to put them in the order I want them especially for you, that just wastes time. It's only a few seconds, sure, but if I have to do that several times per day, it's boring, and annoying! Sometimes I get files from people that have dozens of tests, taken at different points in their studio build, and it can take several minutes to re-arrange those into a logical sequence. Make it easy for me to help you, and it's probable that you'll get better help!

If you also have a sub-woofer, then you will need to do a set of SEVEN tests, instead of just three, in the following order

--S Sub only
L-- Left speaker only
R-- Right speaker only
LR- Left plus Right speakers, but no sub
L-S Left plus Sub
R-S Right plus Sub
LRS All three on together


FINALLY...

Save all of the measurements into one single MDAT file ("File" menu, "Save all measurements"), upload that MDAT file to your thread on this forum, not some other place. (Note. Post it in YOUR THREAD! Not this thread here. Your own thread, here on the Soundman Studio Design forum, where you are documenting your room build / tuning process. If you post links on THIS thread, I will remove them. I do not want this thread cluttered up with measurements or details about your own build. This thread is ONLY for instructions on how to use REW, and questions about that).

If you post your results on another forum or website, I probably wont see them, so you won't get a response from me. Post your results here, only, and on your own thread. You can post the actual MDAT file here on the forum, in addition to any graphs or pictures, and text messages. Some other forums don't allow you to post the MDAT file, as they can get very big, but there's no restriction here: post the actual data file here, where it will always be located right along with the rest of your thread.

5. Make a note of the mic location: LAST STEP: VERY IMPORTANT!!! When you have done all of the above, you need to measure EXACTLY where the mic is in the room, in all three dimensions, and using reference points around the room that wont change or end up hidden behind treatment! You need to be able to get the mic back to that precise location, every single time you do another set of tests, and it has to be accurate to within about 5mm (1/4"). The tip of the mic must always end up at that point, every time. If not, then you cannot compare the graphs, validly. Very important.

(One easy way of doing this is to get a small plumb-bob from a hardware store (not a big one! small and light weight), attach it to a piece of string, and hold the string exactly at the tip of the measurement mic such that the point of the plumb-bob is just above the floor. Wait for it to stop swinging, then mark that exact spot carefully on the floor (on masking tape stuck to the floor), and also mark the position where the mic is on the string. That way, you can always get the mic back to the exact same spot by holding the mark on the string on the mic tip, then adjusting the height and location of the mic stand until the plumb-bob is at the marked spot on the floor)

That's it! Not complicated.

I will add more information to this thread in the future, with instructions on how to look at your data (settings for REW), and basic tips on how to interpret your data, as well as other acoustic tests you can do in your room, to reveal more about it, and understand it better.

If you got this far and you are interested in doing a more complete and detailed analysis of your room, then here's another article I wrote that should help you with that: The "walking mic" test, using REW



- Stuart -



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Re: How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#2

Postby Dr Space » Sat, 2019-Oct-05, 12:18

Wow.. that is great.. I look forward to when I am at this point. I am correct that this is only for when you room is finished and you have placed your speakers in the softits that you can run this? Also, how do you make these kinds of measurements in your live room?? Where do you set up your speakers and microphone to do the measurements?? I am curious. Thanks for your expertise.

scott



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Re: How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#3

Postby Soundman2020 » Sat, 2019-Oct-05, 12:56

Dr Space wrote:Wow.. that is great.. I look forward to when I am at this point. I am correct that this is only for when you room is finished and you have placed your speakers in the softits that you can run this?
I prefer to take measurements throughout the build, from as early as possible in the empty room when the response is still ghastly terrible, all the way up through the final tuning. You can do the early tests with the speakers set up roughly on stands, then place them more accurately as the build progresses. The early tests help to identify the major issues, and each subsequent test shows if the most-recently installed device is doing what it is supposed to do, as well as showing you what still remains to be done. Sometimes you find new things you hadn't seen before as go along, when one part of the treatment removes a large issue that was masking a smaller one.

There's a related procedure, here that I call the "walking mic" test, which I often use with my clients to get a better understanding of the room, at a couple of stages in the build (not too often, though; it is tedious, and generates mountains of data that you then need to analyze). It can be very revealing, though, and is a great guide and help when designing suitable treatment for each part of the room.

Also, how do you make these kinds of measurements in your live room?? Where do you set up your speakers and microphone to do the measurements?? I am curious. Thanks for your expertise.
Live rooms are a bit different, since there is no single "sound source" location, nor one single "listening position". All locations are valid for both purposes! What I normally do is to set up one single speaker in a location where there would typically be an instrument, then put the mic at a location where a room mic would typically be located, for picking up the room ambience of that instrument when it would be being tracked. Do that in a few different spots (eg, for where you'd normally have the drums set up, where you'd have the bass, where you'd have the electrical guitar cab, where you'd have a vocalist, etc.). Each one will give you a "snapshot" of how the room responds for that particular setup, and you can then take decisions on suitable treatment based on what you see.

Another setup is with the speaker down on the floor in one corner of the room, and the mic high up near the ceiling in the diagonally opposite corner of the room: that test is a good way to reveal all of the low frequency modal stuff at its worst.

There's lots of ways to use REW! It's a great tool.


- Stuart -



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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#4

Postby p35inc » Tue, 2020-Apr-14, 12:44

Is it possible to use REW EQ to measure and calibrate a 5.1 system?
Specifically a monitoring system where audio is fed through the subwoofer with bass management.
If so, how do I implement the measurements in ProTools once completed?
Thanks in advance,
Brian



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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#5

Postby Soundman2020 » Tue, 2020-Apr-14, 13:29

Hi Brian, and Welcome to the Forum! :thu: :)

Is it possible to use REW EQ to measure and calibrate a 5.1 system?
Yes it is, but it's a bit more complex than for a 2.0 or 2.1 system. It would be a good idea for you to start your own thread in the "RECORDING STUDIO ACOUSTICS AND TREATMENT" section, and provide more details about your room and your speaker setup. Photos would help too!

If so, how do I implement the measurements in ProTools once completed?
There's not a lot you can do in ProTools (or any other DAW) to fix acoustic issues with the room. That's into the realm of what I prefer to call "digital tuning"... I'm working on writing an article about that, but it's not close to being ready yet. Anyway, suffice it to say that what a DAW (or dedicate hardware) can do, is apply EQ filters that adjust the levels of specific frequency bands. That can only be used in a room that has good acoustic treatment already, as a final tweak. That's no use if the room has not been treated properly. You can't fix bad acoustics with EQ... because the vast majority of room acoustic issues are in the "time domain" (resonance or reverberance), or they are related to combinations of reflections in the room, and EQ cannot do anything about those. EQ can only change frequency response. By "time domain", I mean the way the sound decays over time after it has left the speaker, an is just bouncing around the room: here too, there's not much that EQ can do to change that! As I mentioned above: EQ is only useful as a final tweak to correct some aspects of frequency response, AFTER all of the acoustic issues have been taken care of, with treatment (usually along with modifying the layout of the room).

Perhaps the most important use of REW in a studio, is to analyze what the problems are in the room, so that they can be fixed with treatment. REW is very powerful in this sense: it shows you a lot of information that can be used to figure out what is wrong with the room, what the issues are, where they are coming from, and thus implement treatment to deal with them.

The basic procedure for 5.1 is similar to the procedure for 2.1, but more complex: because you have twice as many speakers to deal with: But the basic idea is the same: Look at the data for each individual speaker by itself, to see what it is doing in the room. Then look at combinations of speakers, comparing them to see if they are sensibly similar. Then look at the data from all the speakers together, to see how the low end of the spectrum is doing. For most of that, the Frequency Response ("FR") graphs are not your main tool: rather, look at the waterfall plots and the Impulse Response graphs (ETC is best here), as well as the phase graphs.

But please do start your own thread, and we'll see what can be done to improve your room, and how you can use REW to do it.

- Stuart -



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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#6

Postby jazztronaut » Sun, 2022-Sep-18, 02:37

Hi Stuart, on the subject of measurement mics, is there a way to test whether if the mic is faulty. The reason I'm asking is that I have dropped mine a couple times when the tripod had been tipped over by accident.

Thanks!



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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#7

Postby gullfo » Sun, 2022-Sep-18, 12:39

you could run an REW calibration on your wrap-around connection to set the baseline for the electronics. then run a sweep with the speaker 1m from the mic - set volume appropriately - preferably in a large or treated space, or even an open garage etc. your mic will have some bumps - normal - however large bumps or drops will be indicative of a problem.



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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#8

Postby Greyhound » Wed, 2022-Dec-14, 19:20

Soundman2020 wrote:Source of the post

If you also have a sub-woofer, then you will need to do a set of SEVEN tests, instead of just three, in the following order

--S Sub only
L-- Left speaker only
R-- Right speaker only
LR- Left plus Right speakers, but no sub
L-S Left plus Sub
R-S Right plus Sub
LRS All three on together




I have a question about measuring L--, R--, and LR- in a system with a sub:

In my chain, the DAC L/R outputs go to the sub (Focal Sub6), which routes high-pass filtered signals on to the L/R mains (Solo6's) and a low-pass filtered signal for playback by the sub.

The sub can be cut out of playback in one of two ways:


    [1] The sub is 'muted' and the high-pass filtered signals are sent on to the L/R mains (exactly as during 2.1 playback, without the sub).

    [2] The sub is 'bypassed' and the full-range DAC outputs are sent directly to the L/R mains without high-pass filtering (as in 2.0 playback).


It's clear that acquiring L--, R--, and LR- in the two ways will give different information, and I'd be grateful for feedback on whether there is a 'preferred' way. I suppose this depends partly on the extent to which 2.0 playback is an important part of one's workflow (eg checking mixes without the sub).



Thanks!



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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#9

Postby Soundman2020 » Tue, 2023-Apr-11, 01:05

In this case, you would use the "sub muted" option, as you want ONLY the Left and Right speakers, and ONLY doing what they would be doing if the sub were actually on. The reason being that you want to see how the speakers are interacting with the room all by themselves, without considering the sub, but assuming that they are only producing the frequency range that they would be producing of the sub were on. That shows you what the room and individual speakers are doing together, all by themselves, which is what you need to know for designing treatment to deal with that, and also for deciding on possible digital tuning at some point.

- Stuart -



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gullfo
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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#10

Postby gullfo » Tue, 2023-Apr-11, 09:27

+ presuming you've added the sub because of the limits on the speaker response, and the sub levels are matched to extend the speaker range (rather than set to work as LFE where you may want the exaggerated response in the sub for audio FX), then muted is the right answer as simply passing through the full range wouldn't make much difference as the LF tapers off anyways. however, it cannot hurt to test in both modes (i have a 3-way cross-over unit and i can mute and bypass) and since my sub is set to match up to several speaker pairs (because it's really about the room :-) ) i test my rigs in both modes as more information is OK... and since i often switch in & out the sub when checking to make sure the bass is appropriate to the material in both sub on, and sub off modes.



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How To Calibrate and Use REW To Test and Tune Your Room Acoustics

#11

Postby Greyhound » Wed, 2023-Apr-12, 06:41

Very helpful - thanks guys!




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