SpectraFoo is another really good option.
CALIBRATE SPL SMAART V7 MAC
If you are on a mac you have a few more options than PC.įussMesure is pretty basic but if you just need basic snap shot graphs it will get the job done.
CALIBRATE SPL SMAART V7 SOFTWARE
If you wanted to go the USB mic route look at the MiniDSP UMIK-1.Īs far as software goes. Thought the Daton EEM-6 is pretty tempting. Only other mic that hasn't been mentioned that I think falls in this range is the Rational RTA-420 if its good enough for SMAART its good enough for me. r/broadcastengineering - Broadcast Engineeringīeen looking in this as well.r/projection_mapping - Projection Mapping.You might find these other subreddits useful: These rules are implemented at the moderators' discretion.
![calibrate spl smaart v7 calibrate spl smaart v7](https://images.sftcdn.net/images/t_app-cover-l,f_auto/p/3500c29a-9b2b-11e6-bc54-00163ec9f5fa/598661266/smaart-screenshot.jpg)
CALIBRATE SPL SMAART V7 PROFESSIONAL
This is a place for questions, links, and discussions about the professional Live Sound world. If I do find the need to produce legally binding measurement data, then I'll budget for renting the correct, calibrated gear and do it right.Please note that new reddit accounts are unable to make posts here, so please direct your questions to the "No Stupid Questions" Thread I also keep a Simpson and a Cirrus calibrator handy in case my Quest calibrator doesn't work, but really I don't forsee that happening anytime soon, it's a pretty solid device! I haven't sent my calibrator in to get it calibrated, primarily because it's only a dB or two off from a known standard that I compared to, which is good enough for my books and for most of my Smaart work. I'm still waaaay ahead of buying a new calibrator for hundreds of dollars more! Just recently I got myself a Quest Type 1 calibrator for $60!!! I had it sent to Harry Brill, and he turned on his lathe several mic adapters for a very reasonable price to fit all my different test mics. Search ebay, because there's plenty of acoustic calibrators for sale there, some pretty good for the money! You can always send it in to get a current calibration. Of course having a measured response curve of the particular mic (like you would get from rational) is a great start. If you don't know exactly where your mic is on the response curve-you could easily make the wrong decision. There was quite a variance in level and response. I had a link (but have lost it) to a guy who measured something like50 of the Behringer mics. If it is not, then the measured SPL could be off. The claibrator assumes the response of the mic is totally flat. They are ''dead nuts on'' in response and level. Two of the mics started to ''drift'', so I got some real measurement mics. This also would give me a chance to keep tabs on the freq response. Then I would swap out mics in the same position and adjust the levels as needed so the matched the reference.
![calibrate spl smaart v7 calibrate spl smaart v7](https://studiosixdigital.com/_Media/screenshot-20130824-154256.png)
I knew which one had the lowest output and would turn on a single loudspeaker and capture that trace. I would always do my own ''calibration'' before each measurement session. I origionally used the origional Superlux 999 mics (before the quality dropped) and they held up real well over a couple of years. It does not show you the freq response of the mic or any way to check that. One of the problems with a calibrator is that all it does is give you a reference at 1 or 2 freq. Re: Calibrating measurement mics.-Freq response