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Post by Johnkenn on Oct 7, 2022 17:12:55 GMT -6
An important consideration could be: Do a mix with the speakers in vertical. Save it. Do the same song mix with the speakers in horizontal. Save it. Take the two mixes and compare them on other systems (car, earbuds etc as well) and see how they compare. Which mix translates better? That could make the decision for you! P.S. Speakers in diagonal orientation optional! I’m not THAT interested.
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Post by Johnkenn on Oct 7, 2022 17:17:29 GMT -6
I actually had more treatment put in to try and correct more of the bottom end issues. It didn’t really show up so much in the Trinnov measurements, but it does sonically. Since the new treatment, I’ve turned them vertically and thought it sounded better. I can definitely hear more of a phantom center and the soundstage is awesome. Don’t know whether that’s the treatment or turning vertical.
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Post by Johnkenn on Oct 7, 2022 17:19:27 GMT -6
Been mixing a tune with a female vocal that I thought was giving me some trouble. Like I was really hearing issues around 250hz that I corrected. Would still hear it occasionally and was a little bummed. Pulled it up in the car and it translated fantastically. So I’m thinking it’s an improvement.
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ericn
Temp
Balance Engineer
Posts: 16,107
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Post by ericn on Oct 7, 2022 17:20:33 GMT -6
I actually had more treatment put in to try and correct more of the bottom end issues. It didn’t really show up so much in the Trinnov measurements, but it does sonically. Since the new treatment, I’ve turned them vertically and thought it sounded better. I can definitely hear more of a phantom center and the soundstage is awesome. Don’t know whether that’s the treatment or turning vertical. I would save the Trinnov settings, then re-shoot the room with the added treatment, see if the new treatment changes what the Trinnov wants to do. In other words did the added treatment solve a problem the Trinnov was dealing with.
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Post by Johnkenn on Oct 7, 2022 20:50:34 GMT -6
I actually had more treatment put in to try and correct more of the bottom end issues. It didn’t really show up so much in the Trinnov measurements, but it does sonically. Since the new treatment, I’ve turned them vertically and thought it sounded better. I can definitely hear more of a phantom center and the soundstage is awesome. Don’t know whether that’s the treatment or turning vertical. I would save the Trinnov settings, then re-shoot the room with the added treatment, see if the new treatment changes what the Trinnov wants to do. In other words did the added treatment solve a problem the Trinnov was dealing with. It helped for sure…the dip at 80-100hz is shallower for sure. The huge bump in the sub is still about the same, but I’m less concerned about the Trinnov cutting than boosting. Was just about to come on here and praise the Trinnov again. Gonna bump that thread.
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