On 03/01/2010 05:07 AM, Fernando Lopez-Lezcano wrote: >> but that piece gave me one particular headache: the phasiness artefacts >> were very apparent, to the point that we decided to apply random >> staggering to the delays (which i had measured to within a few cms, >> sigh!). that fixed it. > > Interesting. I don't think I quite understand. Do you have code for > that? Or any suggestions? i was using ambdec... first you can try to deactivate delay compensation altogether (but that's a little extreme for the corner speakers in a rectangular rig), so i backed up the configuration file and modified the distance measurements to introduce small arbitrary errors. > A couple of weeks ago I did Phoné and it also sounded very good (this > time inside our small concert hall). haven't heard it. also by chowning? >> i'd love to try such a rig outdoors, i can imagine how nice it could be. > > It was very very nice. The backyard is not so big and is flanked on two > sides by the building itself. See it here: > > http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&q=&vps=1&jsv=209c&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=43.443045,66.708984&ie=UTF8&geocode=FfT_OgIdBsy3-A&split=0 that link does not work for me - nothing obvious though, the line-break isn't the problem. > We bought 8 new QSC speakers and used a couple of old Meyer subs and > after calibrating a little bit it was sounding great. I did not measure > to the centimeter but it still worked. I imagine with all your > experience you would do a much better job. or not. as i've had to learn, don't measure too well :-D _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user