I am playing with a dipole subwoofer and would like to employ a dipole rolloff compensation filter.
Does anyone know how to enter/create a "+6b/oct dipole rolloff compensation filter" in the MC 18 (e.g. 100Hz down to 20Hz)?
I tried adding a "low shelf filter" in the Parametric Equalizer, but that is a flat boost across a specific range.
Do I have to add a series of "equalizer filters"? If so how (which is first, are they additive, etc.)?
100Hz - 0dB - bandwidth(Q) ?
50Hz - 6dB - bandwidth(Q) ?
25Hz - 12db - bandwidth(Q) ?
TIA
The shelf isn't just a flat boost above or below a specified range, the Q lets you specify how quickly or slowly the boost is applied from the "shoulder" frequency. For example, I currently have baffle step compensation dialed in to provide 4 dB of boost over two octaves. My low shelf frequency is 200Hz and my Q is .66 (two octaves). The boost begins getting applied slightly above 200Hz, and the signal isn't the full 4dB up until a little below 50 Hz. Below 50 Hz it levels out. So I, in effect, have a 2dB per octave boost between 200Hz and 50 Hz.
You could easily dial in a shelf with a 12db gain and a two octave Q (.66) starting at 100 Hz. That would get you close to what you want (12 dB up at 25 Hz, 6 dB up at 50 Hz), but you'd need to go farther if you wanted subsonic adjustment (18 dB gain with a three octave Q, etc.).
I'd recommend that you dial in the 12 dB filter I mentioned and then play the full-band pink noise calibration clip while looking at the DSP analyzer. You can then see if the boost starts in the right place, is high enough, etc. The analyzer graph will let you see if the boost is being applied the way you want it to be, and then you can paddle around until it looks (and measures) correctly.
If you need a non-linear boost, you could probably also use the linkwitz transform DSP module, but the shelf is a little easier (for me) for a linear boost.