Quote:
Bass Boost:
I am not using "preserve louder peeks". When i turn this off and play 40Hz sinetone, bass "rings"
It's better with "preserve louder peeks" ON but it's still there, Any chance to fix this?
It's like Internal Clipping in This filter. Meters are much higher then in 4096 mode.
edit: Seem when "Then dropping to no boost" is larger then 170Hz this starts to occure much more.
Especially when MB is in 'limit' mode.
Test settings - Boost from 100-200Hz.
The thing is, you aren't boosting "from 100-200Hz". You are really boosting at max rate from 0 to 100Hz, then decreasing the boost from 100% to 0% of your selected boost amount from 100Hz to 200Hz. Assuming a linear drop, that would mean at 150Hz, you'd be boosting 50%.
This is why your Addiction V11 was too boomy for my liking. In that, you have a full boost strength from 0 to 50Hz, then drop to no boost at 270Hz. The sound is still getting a fair amount of boost once you pass 180Hz.
100 - (130 / 220 * 100) ~= 40.91% boost @ 180Hz. 100 - (150 / 220 * 100) ~= 31.82% boost @ 200Hz.
Probably if you changed the Maximum Boost to be from 0 up to 0 and let it naturally decay all the way out to 270, then give the deep bass the extra boost over in the Loudness section, it will sound better. The same calculations as above:
100 - (180 / 270 * 100) ~= 33.33% boost @ 180Hz. 100 - (200 / 270 * 100) ~= 25.93% boost @ 200Hz.
If you go by my settings in the preset that I made that cuts off the boost at 200Hz (the "standard" definition of where "bass" ends):
(100 - (180 / 200 * 100)) * 0.80 = 8% boost @ 180Hz
I guess this would also depend on the type of speakers you have as to what would be "better". I'm sending to 2x40W 3-inch drivers, so I don't really want much boosting past about 150Hz. If I had 2x50W 4-inch drivers, then sure, I'd let a stronger 150-300 signal go to them, as they should be able to reproduce that area of the sound better than the smaller speakers would.