Suedkiez
(Just a fellow user like you)
April 16, 2023, 2:24pm
2
Measure the room and use DSP in Roon. Taming room modes this low with passive means is impossible because the wave lengths are just too long, you would need huge traps.
You can use parametric EQ or a convolution filter.
Quick, cheap and simple way to get good results already:
I would like to share an app note on room correction for Roon using HouseCurve , an audio analysis app for your iPhone/iPad.
Full disclosure, I’m the author of HouseCurve. I wrote this app note a few months ago and it has been getting a lot of interest. I’m sharing it here on the Roon community forum so I can answer questions for Roon users.
One of the most common questions is about the quality of iPhone microphones. The sort answer is “actually, pretty good, especially when you don’t have…
Or invest a bit more and get your filters tailormade:
Hi All,
I would like to share with you a young company providing with high quality room audio correction available on Roon.
This is HomeAudioFidelity: https://www.homeaudiofidelity.com/
You will find more details about the technology embedded in this solution.
From my point of view, this is the best solution I have implemented so far. Previously I was doing my own corrections using Rew and Rephase but with this solution the results are far more efficient with a very nice soundstage, deep, la…
There is also other software. Lots of other info here:
I have experimented with REW (Room EQ Wizard) and room correction, and how to apply it in Roon, and decided to write a guide about it. This is what produced best result for me (I sit in a small room with concrete walls), but the way I did it should work well in bigger rooms and for different walls as well. This guide assumes you have a 2.0 or 2.1 system, and works best if you have a specific listening position and you sit in the middle of the sound, with an equal distance to left and right speak…
Otherwise the only options are tuned diaphragm traps like
Or active traps like
Unique: easy to set up and move, no calibration required, as efficient as passive absorbers 25 times its size, the AVAA C20 typically reduces the resonance time of all room modes between 15 Hz and 150 Hz by up to 50%.
Est. reading time: 40 minutes
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