OP
- Thread Starter
- #321
Ah, after thinking about it, you are right. For some reason I was thinking the changes would be split across the curves that make it up, which isn't true, as if you EQ the PIR curve to be +2dB @1kHZ, then all other curves must increase by +2dB, as they are all directly related, as any changes to the on-axis is applied identically to the other curves.I'm confused. EQ'ing a speaker is an all-or-nothing proposition: it will affect all curves at once, because EQ applies all radiated sound equally. From that perspective, I don't understand what you're trying to say by "If you EQ the LW/ER/SP, you have no clue how it affects the curves that make them up". It's not possible to "EQ the LW/ER/SP". You can only EQ the entire speaker, and whatever EQ you apply affects all curves equally in a perfectly predictable way.
It would be a pain in the but though, as if you EQ the PIR, then you have to go back and apply those changes to every other curve (though easy if you have a duplicate document that applies that difference to every curve).