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*IF* you need more then a few bands you totally miss the point of parametric eq
Not speaking that it is a waste of cpu cycles which are rather limited in embedded systems.
Can you post your EQ settings?
I respectfully disagree. I've experienced a lot of success making headphones fairly neutral in the past by removing their deviations from neutrality with parametric equalization, all while without creating audible (to my ears) artifacts. If I am creating artifacts, I can't hear them, so I really don't care. The post-ringing of minimum phase equalizers is generally masked by the signal itself anyways.
How are you generating these parameters though?
I do like that website though, it reads warmer and more open than most other websites, which seem muddy by comparison, especially at the mid page point.
QuoteHow are you generating these parameters though?0-1000 Hz by measuring the headphones with a microphone, past 1000 Hz by using a sine wave generator (Sinegen) to sweep through the frequencies while listening to the generated sine tones. I then mentally do my best to make what I hear match a smoothly ascending and descending diffuse field target curve. Pic related.
1 decibel differences are very difficult to perceive whilst listening to music... notsomuch whilst listening to test tones, though:
I suspect that you could turn a few of them off and not even realize it.
I would just suggest that the cost/benefit by upgrading from sub-$10 headphones would be saner than messing with 31-band EQ pink-noise analysis...
All I was implying is that if $10 headphones need 12-band-EQ, maybe $20 headphones only need 6-band-EQ...
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