I use to always read/hear that if you boost or cut certain freqs, they would affect height, with, depth, etc .. That has never worked for me, it only makes those freq bands sound higher lower. Any truth to any of that stuff ?
I use to always read/hear that if you boost or cut certain freqs, they would affect height, with, depth, etc .. That has never worked for me, it only makes those freq bands sound higher lower. Any truth to any of that stuff ?
I can say lowering the 5k range pushes the stage back... But that's in my situation... Dunno how other people experience it
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maybe we could just lift glasswolf's thread on this, over at deemer, to here with credit given?
it would be nice if we had native "technical support" in the form of the classic stuff, like IID to IED or whatever, haha.. here on this site.
I guess it depends on the shape of the person's outer ear. Would the frequency ranges that you are talking about reflect/refract off certain parts of the pinna differently?
I know I just pulled this theory directly out of my ass, but it sounded good didn't it?
the why is probably not as important as the knowledge of how or when or what difference there is between ranges?
the overlap region from "mostly" intensity-based, to localize on tweeters is probably different due to people's structural ear geometry differing, but making a correlation is still ball-park kind of a guess, I think.
this goes back to content, and how most of the mono stuff in pop, or rock music is going to pan to the sides with certain instruments, and stick to the middle of the stage for others.
there's probably a pretty fair rule that mixing engineers follow, and when they stray from it you get something that may be a little off-sounding.
chad probably knows a little about this, as he's in and out of the recording environment quite a bit, I believe...
I was like you when I first started to learn - couldn't hear a damn thing
But when I started tuning without my laptop is when I learned the most.
Start doing in with a wide bandwith (example 80Hz-500Hz or 800Hz-1.6kHz) - you'll see for example that not enough midbass range will have your sound not only bright and in your face but closer to you too
Best way to learn is to do it with the subwoofer OFF - that's what I usually do when I really don't know which range has a problem.
Kelvin
I only use the RTA for a rough tune to get started. My sub is also my midbass right now so turning it off might not be a good solution for me.
Just try it
Sometimes, the subwoofer can mask big problems happening up high - what I do is lower the HP of my midbass to 50Hz @24dB/oct and try to get the most of my system as a whole - then bring the HP back to where it were and add the subwoofer back, dial it in and enjoy.
Kelvin