...Or maybe luck has nothing to do with it?
I designed it that way or tried to. I have high efficiency speakers
http://i1217.photobucket.com/albums/dd381/mitchatola/barnettestylec.jpg At 100db SPL @ 1w/1m sensitivity, even with 12db correction, the sound is still quite dynamic.
Here is an overlay of the measured uncorrected (purple) and with DRC enabled (blue) frequency response at the listening position.
http://i1217.photobucket.com/albums/dd381/mitchatola/jan29rawanddrcfreqrespoverlay.jpg I could get away with 6db of correction if I did not want to extend the low end down to 20Hz. I think 6db correction got me to 32Hz. No sign of overload yet and I like to listen reasonably loud.
I attribute this to the upfront work I did using a distance laser measure to accurately and precisely set up an equilateral triangle between listening position and speaker symmetry. This sets up DRC for success.
I have a ~10ft equilateral triangle in my 30’ x 15’6” x 8’ room. My speakers are set up along the long wall.
http://i1217.photobucket.com/albums/dd381/mitchatola/Roomside.jpg With respect to the ETC and diffuse field, I tried to set up a reflection free zone from the speakers to the listening position. Which means the listening position needs to be away from the rear wall.
http://i1217.photobucket.com/albums/dd381/mitchatola/carpetrear.jpg I am about 1/3 of the width of the room from the back wall and the speakers are 1/6 of the width of the room from the front wall.
I voiced the speakers to the room by listening to music (in the bass range) and moving each speaker slowly to and from the front wall until I found the spot where all the bass notes from the song sound the most even in loudness. Use the balance control to voice one speaker at a time. You know you don’t have the spot when some bass notes disappear (null) or are very loud (peak). Once I got them in the ballpark, I used REW to measure and verify and fine tune. After a 3 iterations, I was done. Here is the uncrorrected frequency response at the listening position.
http://i1217.photobucket.com/albums/dd381/mitchatola/jan29leftspeakerrawfreqresp.jpg Pretty good response on its own given the constraints of my room setup.
How did I measure? As you saw in the rom pics, I have a good size table and couch. I moved those off to the side of the room and set up the calibrated omni mic (isolated from floor vibrations) at the listening position facing straight up and ear height. No multi-seat measures yet as it seems to sound good anywhere in the room.
Re: narrow peaks and dips. Here is the unsmoothed frequency response at the listening position with DRC.
http://i1217.photobucket.com/albums/dd381/mitchatola/jan29drcrawfreqrespDRC.jpg I as understand it, the measurement software has more measuring resolution than our ears can hear. We can start discriminating frequency differences between 1/3 and 1/6 octave range. I could be wrong, but that is my understanding.
So when you see my 1/6 octave smoothed frequency response, it seems like every little narrow dip and peak was corrected. That is not the case as you can see in the raw response. But for our ears purpose, 1/6 octave smoothing is just outside our ears ability to differentiate. At least that is my understanding.