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For boobs like me with more interest than expertise, could an expert create a comprehensive and detailed list of every single software and hardware component needed for a complete solution for DRC with JR and its new convolver? thanks very much.
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My set-up is probably as mini as it can be? It's an HTPC with an ASUS Xonar Essence STX soundcard and the HTPC runs Windows 7, AudioLense and J Media River. I bought Audiolense, the mic and the mic-amplifier from their website (
www.juicehifi.com). I haven't tried yet, but I think you can use the ASUS soundcard to both send the signal out and get it back in. If not, I will need an external soundcard.
What you need to do is use Audiolense to feed out an analog testsignal to your hi-fi-setup (through the amplifiers and the loudspeakers, in other words) that you then record with a microphone and send back to the HTPC that is running Audiolense. This is the measurement-part of the equation.
When you have run the test-signal you'll have a measurement of how your loudsspeakers behave in the frequency and time domain. You'll have to do some filtering on this, but Audiolense will help you with it (it's easy to understand). Then you can make a target curve, which is essentially drawing up a curve in the frequency domain for how you want your loudspeker to sound; i.e. flat from as low as it goes to as high as it goes or some dips and peaks or whatever. Then Audiolense will create a filter and save it to your harddrive.
Then; enter MC. With the convolution-engine they're building now, or (for the time being) Convolver VST, you either way have what you need for using the filter from Audiolense (which is a wav-file, if I remember correctly). You then point the convolution-thing to where you have stored your filter and voila! digital room corrected sound will pour out of your your PC and at the end; your speakers.
To try and sum it up: the measurement-part is in the analog domain, the room-correction is done in the digital domain. This means that you can't room-correct recordplayers or casettedrives without digitalizing them first and it also means that you will need some kind of DAC that your PC can feed a signal to at the end. This can either be an on-board souncard or an external DAC or varieties on this theme. This is, after all, Digital Room Correction, so the end result is a digital signal that has been corrected for the influence your room has on your sound (more or less, it can't solve all your problems).
Anyway, it's really quite easy once you get the hang of it, if you ask me. Audiolense as a program is easy to use, with the convolutionengine they're building into MC it will hopefully be really easy to use that as well and the results are impressive, if you ask me. I've been running Audiolense and DRC for 2.5 years now, and I've never looked back.