Sign in   |  Join   |  Help
Untitled Page

ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022
READ ONLY FORUM

This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022

 

Beolab 5 calibration mic position

rated by 0 users
This post has 4 Replies | 1 Follower

Dante
Top 500 Contributor
Sao Paulo - Brazil
Posts 163
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
Dante Posted: Wed, Jan 4 2017 9:36 PM

Hi,

My BL5 are placed in the middle of my living room (+/- 3.5 m apart from each other) and close to the wall behind them (+/- 0.5 m). My listening position (sweet spot) is +/- 2.5 m perpendicularly from the speakers.

Even though the BL5 have a great off-axis horizontal dispersion, I've rotated them pointing to the sweet spot for aesthetics reasons...

 

Now, the tricky part: does anyone know if I have to rotate the speakers, so that the calibration mic is perpendicular to the wall behind them, before triggering the calibration process?

 

Cheers, Dante. 

Barry Santini
Top 150 Contributor
New York
Posts 543
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
No! Calibrate in listening positon
Michael
Top 50 Contributor
Sweden
Posts 2,578
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
Michael replied on Thu, Jan 5 2017 1:29 AM
Barry Santini:

No! Calibrate in listening positon

I think what he means is that the microphone might fail to correctly detect the distance and reverb of the wall if not placed as it probably was designed, to measure it directly behind itself. Since the speakers themselves are round, the change won't do anything really to the speakers low frequency noises, just "help" the microphone.

It's a tricky question and I think that since the microphone is not stereo, the reason to change it is less interesting since there won't be two different readings. I don't think the distance will make for much change either.

Maybe best if Geoff can answer this one Smile

Beolab 50, Beolab 8000 x 2, Beolab 4000 x 2, 
BeoSound Core, BeoSound 9000, BeoSound Century, 
BeoLit 15, BeoPlay A1, BeoPlay P2, BeoPlay H9 3rd Gen, BeoPlay H6, EarSet 3i, 
BeoVision Eclipse Gen 2 55", BeoPlay V1-40, 
BeoCom 6000 and so much else :)  

Jeff
Top 25 Contributor
USA
Posts 3,793
OFFLINE
Silver Member
Jeff replied on Thu, Jan 5 2017 1:39 AM

Given the long wavelengths of bass notes I doubt it make any difference. Wavelength at 20 Hz is 56.5 feet.

Jeff

I'm afraid I'm recovering from the BeoVirus. Sad

Geoff Martin
Top 150 Contributor
Struer, Denmark
Posts 672
OFFLINE
Bronze Member

Hi,

The earlier answer is correct: place your speakers, then calibrate. If you move them (rotation is included as a movement) then re-calibrate.

Note that the ABC measurement does not measure things like distances to walls. It measures the radiation resistance on the loudspeaker. On other words, it "sees" the entire room as a "thing" that "pushes back" on the loudspeakers' radiation differently at different frequencies. That resistance is, in effect, a measurement of the entire room's "magnitude response" effect on the loudspeaker in its location. It cannot "see" individual discrete objects or attributes of the room (like distance to walls) - although changing objects, their locations, or the wall distances, will have a resulting effect on the radiation resistance.

Cheers
-geoff

Page 1 of 1 (5 items) | RSS