Anyone knowledgable about low frequency (subsonic) behaviour of REW ?
Summary of scenario:
I'm measuring the frequency response of my computer audio I/O interface. So I measure the 'loopback' response. Looks reasonable = low frequency roll off with some ripple, some action at 50/100/150 Hz (my UK mains is 50Hz) and 'normal' hf ripples before the curve dives down at approx 20 kHz.
So then take that as a "Calibration File".
Then taking another loopback measurement and applying the calibration file - the hf response flattens out , the mains related frequencies persist to varying degrees (I am understanding this as the current reading is phase uncorrelated with the original sweep wrt mains interference). But while the very LF - say below 20Hz looks straightened out in terms of the basic "dB per Octave" response but the "ripples" remain.
Is this an artefact of the REW measurement technique at LF. Am I missing something ? I've spent a fair bit of time wit audio test kit - AP2 / Prism / Neutrik - but quite some time ago and always willing to learn.
Thanks for reading.
Summary of scenario:
I'm measuring the frequency response of my computer audio I/O interface. So I measure the 'loopback' response. Looks reasonable = low frequency roll off with some ripple, some action at 50/100/150 Hz (my UK mains is 50Hz) and 'normal' hf ripples before the curve dives down at approx 20 kHz.
So then take that as a "Calibration File".
Then taking another loopback measurement and applying the calibration file - the hf response flattens out , the mains related frequencies persist to varying degrees (I am understanding this as the current reading is phase uncorrelated with the original sweep wrt mains interference). But while the very LF - say below 20Hz looks straightened out in terms of the basic "dB per Octave" response but the "ripples" remain.
Is this an artefact of the REW measurement technique at LF. Am I missing something ? I've spent a fair bit of time wit audio test kit - AP2 / Prism / Neutrik - but quite some time ago and always willing to learn.
Thanks for reading.