R
rimisrandma
New member
I bought a Phonic Paa3 audio analyzer meter to help me set-up my monitors. I have 2 powered Event TR-6's monitors and an M-Audio powered BX10S Subwoofer. I have a Presonus FireStudio Mobile FW400 interface.
What I did was get a pink noise track and play it through iTunes. I set my iTunes output volume all the way up and let my interface be my master to my monitors. My M-Audio sub has an active cross-over that sucks out the lows and sends them to the sub and the mids and highs go to my left and right Event monitors. The sub has a defeat switch to take it out of the equation.
So I auditioned Events one at a time with the Pink noise, by defeating the sub and turning one on at a time. Both were about 73-75 db, it is hard to hold the meter and turn things on and off which is why the db moved around during the measurement.
Now with both Event monitors off and using pink noise, my sub was reading 50 to 60 db, something substantially lower. I do have my set-up in an untreated room and worse yet in a corner. So, I brought the sub up to about 74-75 db as well, and there is some pretty heavy boosting to get the same db measurement at the ear/sweet spot for monitoring, like 5db level boost on the sub. I did not have the output on my interface up the whole way either because it gave me some headroom later, things were pretty loud here, and I figured that matching level here was more of what I was after than db output at full output volume setting.
The biggest question here is, do you set the sub level to the same db as your monitors speakers? Each measured independently of course.
Another thing that sux about the M-Audio BX10s is that level will boost the lows as viewed on the meter, but changing the crossover also boosts and doesn't really move the lows up on the frequency spectrum. So, I usually have my crossover set at 80 or 85 hz and increasing the crossover above 100 etc....just seems to raise the mid hump like a level increase and not so much of a frequency shift to incorporate more bass above the 100 hz setting, which I kind of thought I would see.
What I did was get a pink noise track and play it through iTunes. I set my iTunes output volume all the way up and let my interface be my master to my monitors. My M-Audio sub has an active cross-over that sucks out the lows and sends them to the sub and the mids and highs go to my left and right Event monitors. The sub has a defeat switch to take it out of the equation.
So I auditioned Events one at a time with the Pink noise, by defeating the sub and turning one on at a time. Both were about 73-75 db, it is hard to hold the meter and turn things on and off which is why the db moved around during the measurement.
Now with both Event monitors off and using pink noise, my sub was reading 50 to 60 db, something substantially lower. I do have my set-up in an untreated room and worse yet in a corner. So, I brought the sub up to about 74-75 db as well, and there is some pretty heavy boosting to get the same db measurement at the ear/sweet spot for monitoring, like 5db level boost on the sub. I did not have the output on my interface up the whole way either because it gave me some headroom later, things were pretty loud here, and I figured that matching level here was more of what I was after than db output at full output volume setting.
The biggest question here is, do you set the sub level to the same db as your monitors speakers? Each measured independently of course.
Another thing that sux about the M-Audio BX10s is that level will boost the lows as viewed on the meter, but changing the crossover also boosts and doesn't really move the lows up on the frequency spectrum. So, I usually have my crossover set at 80 or 85 hz and increasing the crossover above 100 etc....just seems to raise the mid hump like a level increase and not so much of a frequency shift to incorporate more bass above the 100 hz setting, which I kind of thought I would see.