Handbook for Sound Engineers

(Wang) #1

1624 Chapter 46



  1. Select the microphone position. I usually begin by
    looking at the on-axis response of the loudspeaker
    as measured from inside of critical distance. If
    multiple loudspeakers are on, turn all of them off
    but one prior to measuring. The microphone should
    be placed in the far free field of the loudspeaker as
    previously described. When measuring a loud-
    speaker’s response, care should be taken to elimi-
    nate the effects of early reflections on the measured
    data, as these will generate acoustic comb filters
    that can mask the true response of the loudspeaker.
    In most cases the predominant offending surface
    will be the floor or other boundaries near the
    microphone and loudspeaker. These reflections can
    be reduced or eliminated by using a ground plane
    microphone placement, a tall microphone stand
    (when the loudspeaker is overhead), or some strate-
    gically placed absorption. I prefer the tall micro-
    phone stand for measuring installed systems with
    seating present since it works most anywhere,
    regardless of the seating type. The idea is to inter-
    cept the sound on its way to a listener position, but
    before it can interact with the physical boundaries
    around that position. These will always be unique
    to that particular seat, so it is better to look at the
    free field response, as it is the common denomi-
    nator to many listener seats.

  2. Begin with the big picture. Measure an impulse
    response of the complete decay of the space. This
    yields an idea of the overall properties of the
    room/system and provides a good point of refer-


ence for zooming in to smaller time windows. Save
this information for documentation purposes, as
later you may wish to reopen the file for further
processing.


  1. Reduce the size of the time window to eliminate
    room reflections. Remember that you are trading
    off frequency resolution when truncating the time
    record, Fig. 46-24. Be certain to maintain sufficient
    resolution to allow adequate low-frequency detail.
    In some cases, it may be impossible to maintain a
    sufficiently long window to view low frequencies
    and at the same time eliminate the effects of reflec-
    tions at higher frequencies, Fig. 46-25. In such
    cases, the investigator may wish to use a short
    window for looking at the high-frequency direct
    field, but a longer window for evaluating the
    woofer. Windows appropriate for each part of the
    spectrum can be used. Some measurement systems
    provide variable time windows, which allow low
    frequencies to be viewed in great detail (long time
    window) while still providing a semianechoic view
    (short time window) at high frequencies. There is
    evidence to support that this is how humans
    process sound information, making this method
    particularly interesting, Fig. 46-26.

  2. Are other microphone positions necessary to char-
    acterize this loudspeaker? The off-axis response of
    some loudspeakers is very similar to the on-axis
    response, reducing the need to measure at many
    angles. Other loudspeakers have very erratic
    responses, and a measurement at any one point
    around the loudspeaker may bear little resemblance
    to the response at other positions. This is a design
    issue, but one that must be considered by the
    measurer.

  3. Once an accurate impulse response is measured, it
    can be postprocessed to yield information on spec-
    tral content, speech intelligibility, and music
    clarity. There are a number of metrics that can
    provide this information. These are interpretations
    of the measured data and generally correlate with
    subjective perception of the sound at that seat.

  4. An often overlooked method of evaluating the
    impulse response is the use of convolution to
    encode it onto anechoic program material. An excel-
    lent freeware convolver called GratisVolver is avail-
    able from http://www.catt.se. Listening to the IR can often
    reveal subtleties missed by the various metrics, as
    well as provide clues as to what postprocess must be
    used to observe the event of interest.


Figure 46-23. A data window is used to remove the effects
of the later arrivals.


12

Time

Amplitude

Data window used to
isolate early energy

400
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