Howdy!
I am trying to set my TiDEQ now that it is installed and I need a free RTA program to run on my laptop. Any suggestions or ideas?
Big thanks,
Stereo Junkie
Free RTA?
- brenzbmr@sb
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- Stereo Junkie
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- Stereo Junkie
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Wed Jul 18, 2007 5:31 pm
try this--
- Attachments
-
- RTAwizardinstallv3.29.zip
- (2.31 MiB) Downloaded 572 times
I think we've established that "Ka Ka" and "Tukki Tukki" don't work.
- Stereo Junkie
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Erinn,
Thanks for the input. I had previously attempted to use this one but I don't seem to be able to find a way to keep it graphing the audio, only in short "test" burst that then graph the data. Additionally there does not seem to be a bar graph 1/3 octave option.
Perhaps I am overlooking it? I am sure I don't know how to use this program correctly. Any information you or some else can offer would be of great benefit.
Thanks,
Stereo Junkie
Thanks for the input. I had previously attempted to use this one but I don't seem to be able to find a way to keep it graphing the audio, only in short "test" burst that then graph the data. Additionally there does not seem to be a bar graph 1/3 octave option.
Perhaps I am overlooking it? I am sure I don't know how to use this program correctly. Any information you or some else can offer would be of great benefit.
Thanks,
Stereo Junkie
- fuzzysnuggleduck
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Generally an RTA will send a known signal of a specific length (a burst) to the stereo and then "listen" to what it actually plays with a highly sensitive mic.
The software then graphs the response as it "hears" it through the mic on a frequency/time plot.
You then can go a head and adjust your EQ to compensate where you need to and run the test again. Compare differences.
Something like that.
The software then graphs the response as it "hears" it through the mic on a frequency/time plot.
You then can go a head and adjust your EQ to compensate where you need to and run the test again. Compare differences.
Something like that.
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I have no idea how to use the software I uploaded. I tried it once, to no avail.
You may want to see if you can locate a "spectrum analysis" software and set it to your mic input and use a calibrated mic. I know some programs such as media player have spectrum analyzers built in, and you may be able to take advantage of this.
You may want to see if you can locate a "spectrum analysis" software and set it to your mic input and use a calibrated mic. I know some programs such as media player have spectrum analyzers built in, and you may be able to take advantage of this.
I think we've established that "Ka Ka" and "Tukki Tukki" don't work.