User Ratings

★★★★★
★★★★
★★★
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8
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0
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1
ease 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 2 / 5
features 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 3 / 5
design 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 4 / 5
support 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 2 / 5

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User Reviews

  • Certainly worth the time to learn as it is a very powerful tool that can rival Audiolense and Acurate and beat Dirac all of which cost a significant amount.
  • It's so nice to see an update to this software in 2017. I though the project would be dead after having stopped releases in 2012. This software deserves five stars for the reason alone that there is no freely available software than can do DRC like this can. I've looked at a lot of the commercial alternatives (Acourate, Dirac, and others) but all they have restrictions in their useability if you don't want to conform to the manufacturer's vision of how to use their software. I do my DRC all with freeware tools. I measure the impulses with Room EQ Wizard - it's become somewhat of a standard in that regard and it's easy to compare the measurements to other people's. The resulting conolver files are then convolved by EqualizerAPO which is also used as crossover - if you only listen to stereo a 5.1 soundcard is very handy in that regard. I also gain the advantage of having the correction for the whole system, not just a single playback application like foobar2000 or JRiver. This means my audio is always correct - YouTube, movies, games, whatever. Of course, that requires you to have a PC as central playback station. I even route my turntable into my PC for this reason. From there, I go directly into several power amplifiers. The acoustic performance this enables me for literally 0 bucks spent is amazing. Plus I get to do things my way without being restricted to some manufacturer's choices.
  • Sorry to see that it is completely and only Windows. No linux (or mac) config can be seen. Why?
    1 user found this review helpful.
    Reply from Digital Room Correction
    Posted 2019-07-24
    Noticed this only today. DRC works on Linux too, but you have either to compile it yourself or rely on a distribution package. Checked it right now and Debian, Ubuntu and Fedora include it as a precompiled package.
  • I'm having a lot of fun with this software and I'm only scratching the surface yet. I use it to straighten out my Full Range Line Arrays, home brewed. More info on my journey can be found on DIYaudio if you look for The Two Towers, a 25 driver full range line array. I hope the interest in this great piece of software will rise again, I will do my part to ensure it will. For people trying to get their feet wet, start with something like DRC Designer and move on from there. A big thank you to Dr. Denis Sbragion for developing this tool.
  • Superb software. Keep up the great work :)
  • Awesome project
  • Excellent ... sublime ... amazing, many thanks for your time and for giving us free what others charge ..... Aundiolense, Acourate ... Although I take no merit to them, and delivering software for easy and almost all public. Thanks also to Xnamegs for its GUI. Important if you want to use the GUI in the mic box lime select a target file, such as "pa-44.1.txt". There is an error in the application and it passes the command - PSPointsFile = which is used to specify targets When should I use - for files MCPointsFile = calibration of microphones. Sorry for my bad English, I write from Spain.
  • I love this project, I made a GUI for it. It is written in visual c#. Hope you can add the code to the project if you like it. http://www.mediafire.com/?en5895cpm3kfo7u
  • it is working great in combination with brutefir you get DRC for free and save a lot of money :)
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