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Dsp, a must have?
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<blockquote data-quote="ThxOne" data-source="post: 8796908" data-attributes="member: 675210"><p>To the average listener they may not be able to listen to the sine sweep and say "there is a 4db peak at 442hz and a massive 7db dip at 1326hz" let alone be able to say that there is a phase cancellation. Being able to see what you are hearing will help tremendously.</p><p></p><p>Edit: human ears are designed to hear midrange like vocals and such and these frequencies are boosted naturally by human ears. This is why when people adjust their graphic EQ's it typically will have that classic "Rock EQ" shape... boosted bass, cut mids, and boosted highs. That is us trying to flatten the response so to speak. I agree, a perfectly flat response is not desirable. I typically boost upper mid/treble as I am older. Each ear is different and unique to what it prefers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ThxOne, post: 8796908, member: 675210"] To the average listener they may not be able to listen to the sine sweep and say "there is a 4db peak at 442hz and a massive 7db dip at 1326hz" let alone be able to say that there is a phase cancellation. Being able to see what you are hearing will help tremendously. Edit: human ears are designed to hear midrange like vocals and such and these frequencies are boosted naturally by human ears. This is why when people adjust their graphic EQ's it typically will have that classic "Rock EQ" shape... boosted bass, cut mids, and boosted highs. That is us trying to flatten the response so to speak. I agree, a perfectly flat response is not desirable. I typically boost upper mid/treble as I am older. Each ear is different and unique to what it prefers. [/QUOTE]
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