Quote:
Originally Posted by
RPGWiZaRD 
Question, I see that you can choose between 3 different frequencies for each band. Can you change one of the frequencies and then change to another frequency in the same "band" and the setting will be in use for every frequency, not only the one you currently have "picked" in that particular band. In that case it would be more like a 15-band EQ rather than 5, if you can make adjustment to 3 different frequencies in each band at the same time.
Actually, you can pick from 4 different frequencies in each band, but unfortunately you can't pick multiple frequencies in a band. However, things get interesting when you add BBE to the mix because BBE changes the frequency response too so you need to find a balance. IE: Using BBE to the max will probably require you to boost the midrange frequencies on the regular equalizer but the treble and bass doesn't result in much if any phasing issues nor distortion. If there was, it's too little for me to notice and care even after owning a S9 or J3 for several years. The EQ sounds much better than the Ipod EQu to me.
I'll list 3 relevant bands and the frequencies you can adjust. You can't do them all. You can do adjustments at the 220, 300, 385, or 500 Hz in one band. You can do 1.8k, 2.4k, 3Khz, 4.1k in one band. You can do 6.9k, 9k, 11.7, 13k in another band.
The Cowon's lack of phasing and distortion while EQing should be taken into account. If whomever is trying to neutralize a headphone with those adjustments, that may be too much to sound clean. For any non-hardware EQ, I would only reduce frequencies. The Cowon is hardware-based.
Edited by wind016 - 5/14/11 at 2:50pm