dmp
Well-known member
So I'm building an EQ that is passive L-C design. It sounds very musical and is mostly working as it should (frequencies are correct) BUT it is different than the original at a few bands in listening tests.
This is a circuit for the section in question:
There is a mid (1kHz) and a mid-high (5kHz). The 5kHz sounds the same between my build and the original, but the 1k Hz sounds different. They use different inductors. Both inductors for my prototype were wound on RM8 cores.
I used RMAA to compare the frequency response (LEFT CHANNEL=my prototype, RIGHT CHANNEL=original).
The 1kHz boost and cut show that the prototype boosts or cuts the higher frequencies beyond the filter area. In a listening test, it sounded like the prototype was affecting more frequencies, with which this is conducive. What in the circuit might cause this?
For both units, the EQ fader was at max. This should give 15dB boost or cut, as labeled on the original. The original has slightly more boost/cut than the prototype as well. With the faders centered, both units sound the same and have a pretty flat response.
The 5kHz boost and cut also show some differences between the original and the prototype, although they sounded pretty much the same.
So I'm hoping some expert can give me some ideas on what experiment with in the circuit to find a controlling factor for this behavior...
Thanks!
This is a circuit for the section in question:

There is a mid (1kHz) and a mid-high (5kHz). The 5kHz sounds the same between my build and the original, but the 1k Hz sounds different. They use different inductors. Both inductors for my prototype were wound on RM8 cores.
I used RMAA to compare the frequency response (LEFT CHANNEL=my prototype, RIGHT CHANNEL=original).
The 1kHz boost and cut show that the prototype boosts or cuts the higher frequencies beyond the filter area. In a listening test, it sounded like the prototype was affecting more frequencies, with which this is conducive. What in the circuit might cause this?
For both units, the EQ fader was at max. This should give 15dB boost or cut, as labeled on the original. The original has slightly more boost/cut than the prototype as well. With the faders centered, both units sound the same and have a pretty flat response.


The 5kHz boost and cut also show some differences between the original and the prototype, although they sounded pretty much the same.


So I'm hoping some expert can give me some ideas on what experiment with in the circuit to find a controlling factor for this behavior...
Thanks!