Original wis
CarAudio.com Regular
So is there a place that has a DSP tutorial for someone below the dummy level? Because I literally don't understand any of it. I've tried to read the tuning 101 tutorials here and on other sites but they assume that the reader understands basic terminology, and I don't.
So when I see words like sweeps, on axis, RTA, etc... It sounds like Tony Stark talking to Doc from Back to the Future to me. Actually I'd probably have better luck integrating a Flux Capacitor into an Arc Reactor because I've at least seen a picture of those things.
I guess my point is, where is the tutorial that begins with basics like which speaker to tune first, what you're trying to get out of it, why do it in the first place.
As an example I know that sound deadener makes things rattle less, which makes everything sound better because there's less background noise so you hear more of the music. How it does that I have no idea. I know that butyl is some sort of sticky rubber with aluminum on the back, and when you tap something that has it compared to tapping something that doesn't there's no echo just the first thud so that makes obvious sense.
Is there anything that's that basic that I can look at around here that explains the how and the why of a DSP in that basic of terms?
Lewis King
So when I see words like sweeps, on axis, RTA, etc... It sounds like Tony Stark talking to Doc from Back to the Future to me. Actually I'd probably have better luck integrating a Flux Capacitor into an Arc Reactor because I've at least seen a picture of those things.
I guess my point is, where is the tutorial that begins with basics like which speaker to tune first, what you're trying to get out of it, why do it in the first place.
As an example I know that sound deadener makes things rattle less, which makes everything sound better because there's less background noise so you hear more of the music. How it does that I have no idea. I know that butyl is some sort of sticky rubber with aluminum on the back, and when you tap something that has it compared to tapping something that doesn't there's no echo just the first thud so that makes obvious sense.
Is there anything that's that basic that I can look at around here that explains the how and the why of a DSP in that basic of terms?
Lewis King