Hi Tim, thanks for reaching out. There is no ideal distance, the measurement points on the outside can define the listening area, so it depends on the user requirements. The larger the listening area the less aggressive is the correction.
@@diracresearch I have a two problems. 1.if i measure 40-50 cm from the center to each point I lose my stereo image it gets really narrow and reverb rooms are very hard to hear suddenly. 2. If i measure 60-70 cm from the center to each point a lose a lot of bass information. Even if I raise the lowest point around 30hz up to 5db. In both cases I lose the warm thumb of the bass, a bit more with wider measurements. Its always a lose and win situation and it never sounds right
@@o.Silex.o Hi Tim, thanks for reaching out. Please use our Knowledge base/Help desk to open a ticket helpdesk.dirac.com. We'll be happy to support you there.
@@o.Silex.o yes, placing the microphone correctly is very crucial for a successful measurement and room correction and is not very well explained at all......did you get a solid info about this? any success and tips??
@@o.Silex.o I read the minimum distance should be 12 inches/31 cm, so should be 31 to the first one and 62 to the second one from the center position....did you try that? what is not clear how many measurements are at the ear position? only the one at the center?? also 12 inches min to the fron and back from the listening position? very confusing and if is always 12 inches as minimum some measurement will be below the desk. * The measurement points should have a distance of at least 30 cm (12 in) between one another. * Avoid making measurements in too small a space. Even for the "Tightly focused" listening environment, it is important to spread out the microphone positions in a sphere of at least 1 meter in diameter. Too small space will result in over-compensation, which sounds very dry and dull.
dirac has nice quality sound too in my realme 6i,and a very loud speaker too
Would you explain why audio must be running in the DAW? And is this audio muted in DAW? Doesn't it interfere with the measurement process?
Hi Tom, thanks for reaching out. Please use our Knowledge base/Help desk to open a ticket helpdesk.dirac.com. We'll be happy to support you there.
All set now. Thanks!
What's the ideal distance from the center to the measure points on the outside?
Hi Tim, thanks for reaching out. There is no ideal distance, the measurement points on the outside can define the listening area, so it depends on the user requirements.
The larger the listening area the less aggressive is the correction.
@@diracresearch I have a two problems. 1.if i measure 40-50 cm from the center to each point I lose my stereo image it gets really narrow and reverb rooms are very hard to hear suddenly. 2. If i measure 60-70 cm from the center to each point a lose a lot of bass information. Even if I raise the lowest point around 30hz up to 5db. In both cases I lose the warm thumb of the bass, a bit more with wider measurements. Its always a lose and win situation and it never sounds right
@@o.Silex.o Hi Tim, thanks for reaching out. Please use our Knowledge base/Help desk to open a ticket helpdesk.dirac.com. We'll be happy to support you there.
@@o.Silex.o yes, placing the microphone correctly is very crucial for a successful measurement and room correction and is not very well explained at all......did you get a solid info about this? any success and tips??
@@o.Silex.o I read the minimum distance should be 12 inches/31 cm, so should be 31 to the first one and 62 to the second one from the center position....did you try that? what is not clear how many measurements are at the ear position? only the one at the center?? also 12 inches min to the fron and back from the listening position? very confusing and if is always 12 inches as minimum some measurement will be below the desk.
* The measurement points should have a distance of at least 30 cm (12 in) between one another.
* Avoid making measurements in too small a space. Even for the "Tightly focused" listening environment, it is important to spread out the microphone positions in a sphere of at least 1 meter in diameter. Too small space will result in over-compensation, which sounds very dry and dull.