So is this a single 800X sub with both 9's playing (L+R)? If so, that's pretty good! My room doesn't like a single sub, and when both fronts are playing (with no subs) a mono signal there's a deep dip about 10Hz wide right where you don't want it.I am attaching my measurement of my system's bass response with ARC enabled of my Class 9's with 800X sub.
Alan, the anomalies in the 4 to 8K range are high-frequency room resonances as evidenced in the waterfall plot, where it shows retained energy (yellow 'mountains' extend further than at lower freq). This is the typical room ringing that occurs when a large line array is pumping out enough energy to engage resonances above 2K.I ran XTZ Room Analyzer, as promised, but had some glitches with the measurements. I kept getting wonky results in the upper frequencies
I'd be very surprised, as A/D to D/A at those frequencies is a piece of cake, and I'm guessing Anthem uses good quality parts and implementation. Plus, the severity (and later correction) tend to point towards some acoustic issue amenable to electronic or physical mitigation.so I'm thinking the Anthem's mandatory conversion of everything to digital (even if ARC is disabled) might be part of the issue.
When oriented vertically, the measurement (see below) was smoother, albeit still rolling of
I'm still not entirely happy with the upper mids and highs, as they sound a bit "thin" and "tizzy" with ARC, despite measuring better.
Some folks have commented (on other forums) that ARC can detract from overall musicality.
Here are the examples of that taken last week.For example, adjusting the calculated delay to the sub output(s) can make a substantial positive difference.
Alan, yes, Post Audyssey (except for the last one).I presume those are REW measurements, using a Umik (or equivalent), taken after running Audyssey. Just curious, are those single measurements from the main listening position, or multiple mic positions averaged?
I'd be very surprised, as A/D to D/A at those frequencies is a piece of cake, and I'm guessing Anthem uses good quality parts and implementation. Plus, the severity (and later correction) tend to point towards some acoustic issue amenable to electronic or physical mitigation.
More than the frequency response, the temporal behavior reflected in the waterfall is much smoother. Gone is the big dip at 5.8 and the decay seems shorter, meaning less ringing.
The roll-off depicted looks fine. A flat line to 20KHz is not pleasing to most.
The 'Thin" part is due to less ringing, so less overall energy (thinner), but that excess energy is bad (slow decay).
The Tizzy part is hard to parse, as to me, that would mean added sound. Maybe the loss of the null at 5K (therefore more energy) is being sensed as brighter. 5K is in a range most describe as bright when boosted.
All DRC and even physical treatments change the sound rather significantly away from raw-room baselines. So yes, sounds very different, but losing the huge peaks and nulls is usually a win, and once acclimated, is more relaxing and natural sounding.
I disabled my DRC in the Media Room system last week to do some measurements and OMG, the sound was horrific with it off. Boomy bass, highs that rang, not musical at all.
That's not to say any and all DRC is good, as you note, tweaking is sometimes required. For example, adjusting the calculated delay to the sub output(s) can make a substantial positive difference.
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