E
Executivos
New member
Okay I read the thread about creating sine wavs and listening to see what problems my room has. The bass response is VERY bad where I sit.
I have event 20/20's and I sit about 2 feet away sometimes closer and don't really have a choice in that. When I listen to my mixes in my car the lows are WAY too loud. I end up burning 5-10 cds of different mixes guessing and checking each time until it's right.
Also when I'm reviewing in my car, I generally find a little boost on my mids helps too. I guess I need the low frequencies louder and the mid frequencies quieter in my control room.
There's a layout of my studio attached. Someone in another thread mentioned putting up plywood behind where I sit to help with standing waves. I have two 6' x 3' plywood sound baffles with some carpet on them so I tried that and it seemed to help a little bit, but not enough.
I'm in an apartment so tearing up the room is not an option. Would the best solution be one of those 15 band dual graphic eqs to raise the frequencies I'm not hearing and lower the ones I have too much of?
It's such a bummer I just upgraded everything....bought the digi001, events 20/20s, a tube mic, a great mic pre, and some other rack gear....Still my mixes are junk.
Any Ideas (AT ALL) are GREATLY appreciated.
I have event 20/20's and I sit about 2 feet away sometimes closer and don't really have a choice in that. When I listen to my mixes in my car the lows are WAY too loud. I end up burning 5-10 cds of different mixes guessing and checking each time until it's right.
Also when I'm reviewing in my car, I generally find a little boost on my mids helps too. I guess I need the low frequencies louder and the mid frequencies quieter in my control room.
There's a layout of my studio attached. Someone in another thread mentioned putting up plywood behind where I sit to help with standing waves. I have two 6' x 3' plywood sound baffles with some carpet on them so I tried that and it seemed to help a little bit, but not enough.
I'm in an apartment so tearing up the room is not an option. Would the best solution be one of those 15 band dual graphic eqs to raise the frequencies I'm not hearing and lower the ones I have too much of?
It's such a bummer I just upgraded everything....bought the digi001, events 20/20s, a tube mic, a great mic pre, and some other rack gear....Still my mixes are junk.
Any Ideas (AT ALL) are GREATLY appreciated.