I recently took the plunge and bought Sonarworks for room correction eq. I was taken aback by how loud the speakers have to be during the calibration process. Living in an apartment in Tokyo, the calibration process was a nerve wracking experience, not only because of the noise but because the calibration tones very closely resemble our earthquake early warning system alerts. I had to notify the neighbors beforehand that I would be calibrating my speakers for the next 20 minutes.
Because of the trouble caused during the calibration procedure I'm reluctant to run it again if possible, but I'm worried that if I move furniture around in my room I'm going to lose the benefits of the calibration. Most of the correction is at 600hz and down. Is this a range that is affected by things like boxes and keyboards or more the room shape itself? Or rather, up to what frequencies are being affected by the shape of the room and not the things inside of it?
I should add, the speakers are Geithain RL906 so the rolloff begins above 50hz.
Thanks
Because of the trouble caused during the calibration procedure I'm reluctant to run it again if possible, but I'm worried that if I move furniture around in my room I'm going to lose the benefits of the calibration. Most of the correction is at 600hz and down. Is this a range that is affected by things like boxes and keyboards or more the room shape itself? Or rather, up to what frequencies are being affected by the shape of the room and not the things inside of it?
I should add, the speakers are Geithain RL906 so the rolloff begins above 50hz.
Thanks