mother's corpse
Regulars-
Posts
94 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Forums
Events
Gallery
Everything posted by mother's corpse
-
One of my RP-260's is 3-4 dB quieter than the other
mother's corpse replied to jephdood's topic in Home Theater
Lucky me for picking up these speakers at full price $675 as soon as it was released [emoji35]. I no longer have the box and sending this massive speaker is hell. I will ask them just to send me new parts or have me send the old ones in from the defective speaker and have them take a look and send me back replacements. I am so tired of buying expensive stuff to just have them break because of of horrible QC.Sent from my LGMS345 using Tapatalk -
One of my RP-260's is 3-4 dB quieter than the other
mother's corpse replied to jephdood's topic in Home Theater
Same thing happening to me right now with my RP-280F it's a pain in the ***. I think they will give me a free shipping label.. Let's hope. Sent from my LGMS345 using Tapatalk -
What I am seeing now is that it's not the speaker, it's the amp. If it were the speaker, the like colors would all be together but 3db or so apart. So it could be the amp giving me all these issues? Pretty strange. The measurement i just did at my main listening place now shows a db difference like it did at first. throughout the whole frequency measurement even when i switched the weak speaker to the center channel it still couldn't match the left in db or phase. What i wanna know is why it didn't show it at the close up sweeps while cycling throughout all channel's. Sent from my LGMS345 using Tapatalk
-
Nothing shows up when it's on 20v and i play a 80hz or any other tone.Sent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk Not 20V there isn't a 20V ac on your multimeter. There is 200 and 600 V.Yes that's what I meant just a mistype.Sent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk No, you were using DC. You need AC. Look: dam i had no clue that was the way it worked[emoji20] well let's do this again. EDIT - nothing with the correct settings. Sent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk
-
Ok this is the horns. Only one speaker was attached and i cycled that speaker through all channels and then did the same for the other speaker. I am now doing the woofers. Each woofer five times just to be 100% sure we covered every part of these speakers. You can see that the surround channels is low for both speakers Sent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk
-
I can't see (from your photos) what model speaker those are... but if they're the new Reference Premier series, the woofers don't cross over to the horn until 1700Hz-1800Hz. Anything below that is mostly output from the woofers. And if the mic is pointed at the horn while the test tone is sweeping through 100 Hz to 1000 Hz, you're going to see room resonances in your graph. Above about 1500hz, it looks like all the responses overlay one another to the point there would be no issues.From your previous graph of the woofers lower test tones, with the close mic'd response, it looks very close as well (no issues)... though it appears you were still measuring both speakers as the graph has "SP1" and "SP2" on it. Measure just ONE speaker... woofer from 40 Hz to 2000 Hz (close mic'd)... and horn from 2000 Hz on up. And do that with each of the 5 channels on your amp. That would show you if one channel of the amp has a level difference at a particular frequency. If all of those frequency responses overlay one another, then do the same thing with the other speaker. If you notice a difference, then it's the second speaker and not the amp. That makes sense I'll do that now. These are the RP-280FSent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk
-
I moved it from that position. Pointed it upwards and applied the 90 degree calibration file in Room EQ Wizard. I put the mic a few inches away from the speakers and played a sweep from 40hz to 80hz and the results is what i get above. This is all without moving the mic. Yep same speaker and wire and a new wire also just to make sure.Sent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk Doing that you are going to get a combination of the speakers response and the room resonances at those frequencies. That could easily account for the variances you're seeing.Try it with the mic right in front of the woofer (1 inch or less), from 40 hz to 80 hz, with each amp channel and see what it looks like as a control as I mentioned above. Ok i will do that give me a minute.Sent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk
-
I moved it from that position. Pointed it upwards and applied the 90 degree calibration file in Room EQ Wizard. I put the mic a few inches away from the speakers and played a sweep from 40hz to 80hz and the results is what i get above. This is all without moving the mic. Yep same speaker and wire and a new wire also just to make sure.Sent from my LG-D855 using Tapatalk