Quote:
this is the response that I currently have for my STAX headphones:
Mode: Linear Phase
Peak type: S-plane type II
(I always use the same mode and peak type, BTW)
Are you sure that it's better to use Linear Phase equalizing for fighting resonances? At least when I was doing DRC (digital room correction) using Room EQ Wizard, I was told by JohnM, who is the author of this program, the following:
Question:
"Which EQ mode should I use for room correction? E.g., eQuality VST EQ has the following modes: Digital, Linear Phase, Minimum Phase, Analog Phase."
Answer:
"Low frequency modal resonances are minimum phase phenomena, as are the parametric EQ filters which are best suited to addressing them."
(www.hometheatershack.com/forums/rew-forum/31428-questions-about-rew.html)
Another guy at GearSlutz.com also replied to me in the same way:
"I'd go for a minimum phase eq. With room EQ you're trying to address the minimum phase (invertable) aspects of your room and want to affect both phase and amplitude."
(www.gearslutz.com/board/studio-building-acoustics/515579-linear-minimum-phase-equalizing-drc.html)
Also, see this link: www.hometheatershack.com/roomeq/wizardhelpv5/help_en-GB/html/minimumphase.html#top, it explains why you can compensate with boosts for frequency response dips in minimum-phase regions
only.
Headphones are like small rooms with similar resonating problems, so aren't we supposed to use the
same techniques equalizing them? Especially if resonances are caused by modal problems. A room's fundamental resonant frequency can be calculated by dividing the speed of sound per second (1130 feet/sec or 344.65 m/sec) by twice the length. My room is 3.05 m long, so 344.65 / (2x3.05) = 56,5 Hz (microphone measurements confirm it). Using SineGen I found a peak centered around 7 kHz in my Denon D2000 headphones. Most headphone users complain about biggest peaks in 6 kHz - 8 kHz region. It means these resonances are created by the lengths 2,9 cm - 2,2 cm somewhere inside headphones. See the trend?
Try this: after finding the resonances (frequency, amplitude and Q) in your headphones using a procedure suggested by
PiccoloNamek, set up a filter manually in Room EQ Wizard software, export it as a 32-bit impulse file (its better to export two versions: 44.1/32 and 48/32). Then use it in Voxengo Pristine Spaces (it's a VST convolver) to equalize your signal. Any other hi-quality convolver will do.
Tip: resample the obtained impulse files from 44.1/32 to 88.2 kHz/32 bits (for 44.1/16 music) or from 48/32 to 96 kHz/32 bits (for 96/24 music) using the highest quality upsampler available to you and feed to Voxengo Pristine Spaces the music signal upsampled to the same frequency as the impulse files. Avoid non-integer upsampling! Use dither when needed.
This impulse convolving gives a more transparent result than using any VST EQ I tried (even my current favorite VST EQ - PSP Neon HR in FAT/non-LP mode).
Thanks
PiccoloNamek for starting this thread and thanks to
Lee Perry for directing me to it!
PS: If only we could place a small enough microphone in our ear (probably at the entrance to the ear channel or at the membrane?), we could use Room EQ Wizard for an
accurate automatic measurement of dips and peaks in the frequence response of any phone!