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<blockquote data-quote="thch" data-source="post: 2109556" data-attributes="member: 562032"><p>seriously, just set it to some arbitrary number. not one person here can tell you why, fundamentally, they choose the formula that they chose.</p><p></p><p>you'll see a lot of "half octave" or "5hz less" or " third octave" or "3/4th the tuning frequency" or "20hz" or ect...</p><p></p><p>not one person who says this has any clue why. its just something they tried and had work. or worse, just something they heard and passed on.</p><p></p><p>in anycase, a half octave is 0.707x the reference frequency.</p><p></p><p>the easist method is still the obvious one -- SSF up to max, music with dangerously low bass, volume up, lower SSF until something sounds wrong. its almost as if your setting the SSF based upon your actual setup and not some arbitrary formula that someone made up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="thch, post: 2109556, member: 562032"] seriously, just set it to some arbitrary number. not one person here can tell you why, fundamentally, they choose the formula that they chose. you'll see a lot of "half octave" or "5hz less" or " third octave" or "3/4th the tuning frequency" or "20hz" or ect... not one person who says this has any clue why. its just something they tried and had work. or worse, just something they heard and passed on. in anycase, a half octave is 0.707x the reference frequency. the easist method is still the obvious one -- SSF up to max, music with dangerously low bass, volume up, lower SSF until something sounds wrong. its almost as if your setting the SSF based upon your actual setup and not some arbitrary formula that someone made up. [/QUOTE]
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