Hi All,
I'm building an esl which will be ready to listen to very soon and I would like to test it professionally to see how it compares to others like quads?
I usually listen to then with a mic plugged into a scope with a wave generator plugged into the transformers.
How do you test yours?
I'm building an esl which will be ready to listen to very soon and I would like to test it professionally to see how it compares to others like quads?
I usually listen to then with a mic plugged into a scope with a wave generator plugged into the transformers.
How do you test yours?
This is not what I've used (I use homemade LabVIEW-based software) but it's free and highly regarded: HolmImpulse. A search here at diyaudio will turn up tons of information.
Few
Few
I am using FuzzMeasure on a Mac. It works fine, and thanks to sine sweep,
is suited to domestic use since less sensitive to ambient noise.
is suited to domestic use since less sensitive to ambient noise.
This is not what I've used (I use homemade LabVIEW-based software) but it's free and highly regarded: HolmImpulse. A search here at diyaudio will turn up tons of information.
Few
Damn, Few. I do that too. I've got it on my website to share, but it's a bit rough around the edges.
Sheldon's Labview Stuff
Damn, Few. I do that too. I've got it on my website to share, but it's a bit rough around the edges.
Yeah, mine is rough around the edges, rough down the middle---pretty much rough through and through. Nonetheless, it was a learning experience getting it to do what I wanted so I figure that's part of the fun. I implemented the exponential sweep approach which made me feel all state of the art-ish at the time. It looks like you've got quite an eclectic collection of LabVIEW vi's on your website! I have to admit I'm a bit out of practice with the LabVIEW coding. Time to improve my chops.
Few
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