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Why Don't You Use Digital Room Correction?


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Members of the Audiophile Style community know that I use digital room correction and have talked about it many times in these pages. Now, I have an honest question for those who don't use it. Please don't read into this question or assume anything, that doesn't help anyone. There is absolutely zero judgement here. Whatever people prefer is all good with me. If people are happy without DRC, I'm happy for them. 

 

Question: Why don't you use digital room correction?

 

P.S. There are no wrong answers :~)

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3 minutes ago, treitz3 said:

IME, DRC can help in certain situations. No doubt about that. I have heard some superb examples, as well as some very bad implementations.

I would personally rather address the issues and keep the original signal as pure as possible, without any manipulation of the signal at all - other than addressing any noise that rides the line or is created along the way. A KISS approach, if you will.

 

As strictly a 2 channel guy, my stance would probably change if I were to dabble in a HT setup.

Tom

Thanks for the reply Tom. 

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I do not listen critically. Too much effort.  Vast majority of my listening is background music, earbuds while riding my bike (indoors) or cutting grass or whenever.  Even listening to vinyl is primarily background.

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7 hours ago, treitz3 said:

IME, DRC can help in certain situations. No doubt about that. I have heard some superb examples, as well as some very bad implementations.

I would personally rather address the issues and keep the original signal as pure as possible, without any manipulation of the signal at all - other than addressing any noise that rides the line or is created along the way. A KISS approach, if you will.

 

As strictly a 2 channel guy, my stance would probably change if I were to dabble in a HT setup.

Tom

 

1 hour ago, joelha said:

I tried it, with help from the author of the software, and found the sound became less analog. 

 

I wanted the product to work but, for this listener, at that time, it didn't. 

 

I'd prefer not to mention the software as I don't want to take anything away from the author's efforts to develop his product.

 

I envy those who find digital room correction improves their sound. 

 

Maybe someday . . .

 

Joel

I also sense that it would result in a truncated bit depth to do any digital treatments including simple EQ.

But I do have all-analog receivers and can and often will do some tone adjustments (EQ) in the analog amp stage of the chain.  I like a bit (just a tad) of high-end boost, as I am over 50 and so that might be why.  But then again even as a much younger listener I liked hearing a crash cymbal crash with some sizzle.  Horns too, love them a touch sharp and some "there-ness" to them.

 

So no, no digital anything done to the signal.  But I am aware that if you are working with 24/192khz then the signal degrading should be very minimal, possibly inaudible.

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I use the DSP built into my subwoofer (but don't delete me yet! haha), but returned a McIntosh MEN220 which provided comprehensive(?) room correction.  I found that it improved the bass, but at the price of high end detail (sparkle?).  I concluded that it may have helped if I had a more problematic room, but with my room/system/ears, it was not worth the trade off.

 

I considered Josh's convolver(?) briefly, at your recommendation, but at least at the time it was not compatible with my Naim Uniti Core server.  If Josh had a plug and play box, I probably would have bought one.

 

I have since moved to analogue as my favorite source, which based on a comment or two above, probably raises the bar again

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Only real exposure to DRC was with HT receivers, Sony & Yamaha. The receivers were somewhere upper mid-tier, and both flattened the sound to loss of excitement. The bass really took a huge hit, and wasn't pleasant even the highs lost their brilliance, the response would have been flat, so was the music!

Is DRC trying to correct for distortion, or it can't see past the distortion from the speaker, nulling out and boosting frequencies perhaps with a sledgehammer and not a fine brush.

Since then, haven't used any DRC in 2CH setup, just room treatments here and there, rugs, plush couches, painted brick walls. I don't expect a room could ever be treated perfectly, heck even if it was, the recordings we listen to 95% suck badly so is it worth the exercise?  The other issue is that another component is in the chain, even digital could add timing errors, and there's the processing issue as well contributing to noise and masking critical details.

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On 8/23/2024 at 11:30 AM, The Computer Audiophile said:

Members of the Audiophile Style community know that I use digital room correction and have talked about it many times in these pages. Now, I have an honest question for those who don't use it. Please don't read into this question or assume anything, that doesn't help anyone. There is absolutely zero judgement here. Whatever people prefer is all good with me. If people are happy without DRC, I'm happy for them. 

 

Question: Why don't you use digital room correction?

 

P.S. There are no wrong answers :~)

I looked into it.  I had a brief conversation with Mitch and the service he can provide, that being a few years ago. 

 

I bought a mic and did a bit of testing on my own with basic DRC, but I suppose the bottom line is that it just wasn't that important to me.

 

I do have a system with KEF blades and Devialet Expert Pro 440 amplifiers, and suspect that they do a good job with the Devialet/KEF profile to optimize the sound for any room.

 

I don't have an optimized "man cave" that's exclusive to a stereo system, and never wanted one.  I think most of us want the best from the hardware we have, but we all live with a budget and within our means.

 

For me, I think the main reason was that so much music is recorded so differently, whether good or bad, that trying to optimize any recording to sound great just wasn't possible.  You know, the "You can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear" school of thought.  

 

I continue to enjoy all forms of music, but do recognize that a poor recording is exactly that.  

 

If you have a system in a room where you want to have that optimized to be the best it can be, then yes, DRC would certainly be one of the tools you would want to use.

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3 hours ago, Chris A said:

My answer to your question isn't based on simple ideas such as "I don't like it", "it doesn't do 'X' that I want it to do, custom for my tastes", "the music itself isn't consistent enough to bother with this", etc.  These are simple answers to your admittedly simple question. 

 

The truth is that I've used these firmware packages initially to only set channel delays and initial channel gains (due to the combination of loudspeaker placements in-room, differing loudspeaker configurations--including 21 ft internal path lengths for subs, differing insertion delays and gains of the three different DSP crossovers used in series with a preamp/processor, etc.)--because these packages do those two functions fairly well and more quickly than I can do it manually.  I manually copy these two (vector) settings from the "room correction" app, but discard the rest of the most important parts: amplitude and phase corrections, i.e., the transfer function corrections.

 

I've found that all of these packages are telling the user to place the measurement microphone much too far from the loudspeaker front baffles in-room--at the listening positions (LPs)--and therefore are mixing significant amounts of non-minimum phase artifacts from room acoustics with the minimum phase response in their upsweep measurements. Then the app's internal algorithms fail to separate out the non-minimum phase portions (by using techniques like non-flat excess group delay response to avoid trying to correct these frequency band areas, etc.) and are trying to EQ/phase correct non-minimum phase room reflections--that cannot be EQed.  To date, all the apps I've tried have this disease.  The loudspeakers I use in a 5.1 array all have full-range directivity, i.e., the ratio of direct to reflected acoustic energy is above some threshold that the human hearing system needs to hear phase fidelity in-room, above the room's so-called Schroeder frequency--where the concept of direct-to-reflected energy has meaning.

 

I tried an experiment once with a fairly capable commonly used app on my manually dialed-in setup.  The experiment would show that the apps would do nothing to the transfer function response if it was successfully rejecting non-minimum phase in-room reflections.  This is the first criterion necessary to prove that the app could successfully use the measurement microphone distances so far away from each loudspeaker's front baffle (thus mixing in significant levels of room reflections). The apps uniformly failed this test miserably, and they all failed precisely where the physics says they will fail: right around and slightly above the room's Schroeder frequency.  All the apps try to correct this region via attenuation of amplitude response, leaving the setup sounding overly (and unacceptably) "thin". 

 

It's interesting that the apps I've used all apparently fail this test at the same points in the frequency spectrum, and none allow the user to move the measurement microphone to do one loudspeaker at a time at 1m distance, then later combine with measurements at the LPs to get accurate channel delays and channel gains.

 

Chris Askew

Thanks Chris

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On 8/24/2024 at 1:30 AM, The Computer Audiophile said:

Question: Why don't you use digital room correction?

 

 

I'd love to. But so far, I've been unable to find anything close to an acceptable solution (for me). Here are my requirements. I don't have many, they're pretty basic. If anyone can tell me about something that can meet them,  I'd be very interested. 

 

1. Allow transparent passthrough - I want the option to have it ON or OFF

2. Before DAC - I don't want multiple AD/DA conversions. 

3. Operate in digital domain with all my digital sources. That includes up to DSD x256, PCM 32/384, et al. 

 

 

 

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4 hours ago, amey01r said:

 

I'd love to. But so far, I've been unable to find anything close to an acceptable solution (for me). Here are my requirements. I don't have many, they're pretty basic. If anyone can tell me about something that can meet them,  I'd be very interested. 

 

1. Allow transparent passthrough - I want the option to have it ON or OFF

2. Before DAC - I don't want multiple AD/DA conversions. 

3. Operate in digital domain with all my digital sources. That includes up to DSD x256, PCM 32/384, et al. 

 

 

 

Thanks @amey01r

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