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Test CD


JohnA

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Actually there are standard tones used for testing based on the octave scale... such as at each octave, 1/3 octave, 1/6 octave, etc... If you download my test tones above, I've posted them in 1/6 Octave form... which are the following frequencies:

10

11.2

12.5

14

16

18

20

22.4

25

28

31.5

35.5

40

45

50

56

63

71

80

90

100

112

125

140

160

180

200

224

250

280

315

355

400

450

500

560

630

710

800

900

1000

1120

1250

1400

1600

1800

2000

2240

2500

2800

3150

3550

4000

4500

5000

5600

6300

7100

8000

9000

10000

11200

12500

14000

16000

18000

20000

If you have a CD burner... just burn an audio disk yourself... if you don't want to go through 1/6 octave... use every second one as it'll give you 1/3 octave (many 31 band Eq's are 1/3)...

Have fun...

Rob

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On 9/29/2003 8:35:31 AM tillmbil wrote:

Ok, I get it. My SPL reads from 18 to 16k, while my hearing goes from 18hz-10000hz. What does this mean? Do I have a hearinf problem?

Is 18hz-16khz good for Cornwalls?

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18Hz - 16kHz sounds about right for Cornwall I's... actually they are still putting out a signal at 18kHz but the response has begun to drop. I wouldn't suggest retesting it louder though, as sine wave can be pretty deadly to the K77 tweeters in that range.

As for your hearing... it's very age/sex/exposure dependant... and again our hearing response begins to drop in the 10kHz - 16kHz range. With a little more volume (or listening with your ear close up to the tweeter) might reveal a little bit of sound above the 10k.

We are lead to believe that human hearing ranges from 20 to 20k when in reality this is only true for a new born. And 40kHz supper tweeters is wishful thinking.

Later...

Rob

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On 9/28/2003 11:05:40 PM m00n wrote:

Anyone have any suggestions on how to turn a .WAV file into an MP3? I want to take these test tones and convert them to mp3 so I can play them through my DVD player in my theater.

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m00n... your DVD player should be able to read a Redbook CD... and all the tones do easily fit on a regular CD, without converting them to MP3 format.

Just open you CD burning software and burn a "music CD" and this will convert the .WAV files into Redbook and it's Lossless (no quality degradation). If your DVD/CD player can read text CDs I suggest you choose that option (you have to choose burn CD at once to un-grey the box)... it's easier to remember which tone you are testing. 2.gif

A software like CDeX is freeware and will convert .WAV to .MP3 ... but remember that the MP3 is a compressed audio file (it is NOT lossless). CDeX is principally an audio CD ripping software to create MP3s from you CDs.

Later...

Rob

PS: By the way, the tones are all in MONO... with the same signal to both L/R channels. Balancing all 5 channels would be very difficult from a room acoustic point of view and you will rarely receive a similar audio signal from the rears and the fronts simultaneously. In stereo playback, the bass or drum track will frequently be identical for L/R channels so I'd advise calibrating the room for 2.1 (with your sub). A a room that does pretty well with 2.1 channels should do pretty well with 5.1. (my opinion 2.gif )

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Why would you convert them to MP3? You would likely just lower the quality of the signal for no good reason. If your DVD player can play MP3s on a CDR then it should be able to play a regular audio CDR (made from WAV files).

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