So I was pondering today about room correction (I have the IK ARC system that is bearable but not much else) and most of these use "calibrated measurement" mics...you know the ones with the thin tube prior to the SD capsule...I suppose to keep reflective or side sound out of the equation as much as possible...
You then run an impulse response through your speakers and the mic captures the room sound according to the theory...
But this got me thinking...
Would you be able to get accurate MATERIAL response from using such a mic/system but instead of using your speakers you were to align a focused spotlight speaker next to the mic so that ALL the mic picked up was the reflection from the beamed-to-source?
I'm thinking of building a cheap Ultrasonic laser (directional speaker) to try this out...
The thing I was wondering is if you could try out different kinds of sound dampening materials this way...it would allow you to test and do room correction based on tuning the frequency of the rooms treatment rather than injecting some correction EQ into your DAW session...
I wonder if the technology has advanced enough now that it would merit an attempt?
Here's UselessTube video but he's only doing around 11 bit accuracy, which I'm sure can be beat without much effort...
Point me to all the ways I'm an idiot and I'll thank you later.
You then run an impulse response through your speakers and the mic captures the room sound according to the theory...
But this got me thinking...
Would you be able to get accurate MATERIAL response from using such a mic/system but instead of using your speakers you were to align a focused spotlight speaker next to the mic so that ALL the mic picked up was the reflection from the beamed-to-source?
I'm thinking of building a cheap Ultrasonic laser (directional speaker) to try this out...
The thing I was wondering is if you could try out different kinds of sound dampening materials this way...it would allow you to test and do room correction based on tuning the frequency of the rooms treatment rather than injecting some correction EQ into your DAW session...
I wonder if the technology has advanced enough now that it would merit an attempt?
Here's UselessTube video but he's only doing around 11 bit accuracy, which I'm sure can be beat without much effort...
Point me to all the ways I'm an idiot and I'll thank you later.