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Looking for software equalizer with wide range and multi-channel adjustment

porcoalado

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May 27, 2024
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Hey everyone,

I'm a big fan of analog and vintage tech, and I love having a ton of control over my sound. My current setup lets me adjust everything I want on each speaker with active crossovers and equalizers that go from 32khz to infinity (and beyond!). However, I can't exactly take all that equipment with me to the office, for example.

Is there any software out there that would let me equalize audio, cut specific frequencies, and adjust each channel individually, just like I can with my analog setup?

Thanks in advance!
 
EQAPO can do this no problem, although the interface is a little unforgiving, it supports unlimited bands of EQ on however many channels you have on the device. It's a free Windows app.

I am not entirely sure if it supports ultrasonic frequencies (32khz? why? Did you mean 32hz? ) but I also haven't tried running it at high sample rates, so maybe?
 
yes, 32hz my bad, so with that i can eq how i want the sound comming from amazon music?
 
yes, 32hz my bad, so with that i can eq how i want the sound comming from amazon music?
Totally! I am using it myself on my PC, here are the settings I use for room correction and integrating my sub, for example:

1716862823365.png


It works as an "audio processing object" in Windows, which affects all sound going to the output device. I even use it with my DAW without any issue.

Basically you use the editor to create text files which enumerate each filter / setting. Then, you can create other text files which reference them, so the file can be manageable even if it ends up being really complex.

By default it works on all channels at once, but there's a Channel select tool which makes the filters after it only affect that channel.

The cool thing is you can import curves from REW directly, so it's actually a pretty quick and easy (and free) way to do room correction.

You can do FIR but actually it's better to just use IIR for bass since frequency resolution gets shaky at low frequencies if you use FIR.

You can also use VSTs in there, if you want to do something more fancy than basic filtering. I use a crossfeed VST in my headphone settings.

There is a GUI for it called PeaceEQ which simplifies things, but I am not sure if it supports multichannel or not.
 
Totally! I am using it myself on my PC, here are the settings I use for room correction and integrating my sub, for example:

View attachment 371606

It works as an "audio processing object" in Windows, which affects all sound going to the output device. I even use it with my DAW without any issue.

Basically you use the editor to create text files which enumerate each filter / setting. Then, you can create other text files which reference them, so the file can be manageable even if it ends up being really complex.

By default it works on all channels at once, but there's a Channel select tool which makes the filters after it only affect that channel.

The cool thing is you can import curves from REW directly, so it's actually a pretty quick and easy (and free) way to do room correction.

You can do FIR but actually it's better to just use IIR for bass since frequency resolution gets shaky at low frequencies if you use FIR.

You can also use VSTs in there, if you want to do something more fancy than basic filtering. I use a crossfeed VST in my headphone settings.

There is a GUI for it called PeaceEQ which simplifies things, but I am not sure if it supports multichannel or not.
Thanks, I'll see if I can get it to work on my computer
 
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