Hi. I've been playing around with the delays and volume adjustments for the left and right channels in JRiver's Room Correction.
Moving a channel's slider delay from 0.03 to 0.04 almost completely mutes the channel. As you increase the delay the volume SLOWLY comes back up in that channel -- but doesn't seem to go back to the original volume until way up, say around 70+ m (meters?).
*Same behaviour with 5.1 channels. If you move the slider by a lot, the DSP starts to glitch. After resetting the volume goes back to normal. again, moving the slider past 0.03 almost mutes the channel's volume -- so once the glitch happens, it stays glitchy even after resetting and increasing delay slowly back again. Set delays to, say 4 meters, but then completely restart JRiver: volume goes back to normal.
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Another weird behaviour(s) -- although tell me if this is normal when upmixing Stereo to 5.1 MCH (surrounds and fronts)-- is if the Bass Management 'Crossover' is is set to 'no crossover' (from having a crossover), the volume is suddenly, significantly lowered. Setting the crossover to 40-up will increases the volume to normal back again. Can't test all situations as I only use four channels + a sub.
*output is 5.1 channels.
**This glitch happens esp. when switching between crossovers several times. After setting both surrounds and fronts to finally 'no crossover' and then restarting, the volume still remains low. When you enable a crossover the volume just suddenly jumps back up again.
***It's easier to replicate when you switch the crossovers around ALL left, right and surround channels -- rather than just the main left and right channels alone. SET ALL crossovers to no crossovers. The volume will become lower. Uncheck the Room Correction DSP and volume jumps back up. For whatever reason, sometimes when you restart and still enable Room Correction with no crossovers, volume is boosted to max again. ANYHOW, I use miniDSP so I can bypass all this nonesense altogether. I just want to point out these peculiar inconsistencies in the way JRiver's Room Correction DSP behaves.