Hmm, that's not quite what I'm looking for, as that's delay per channel. I'm looking for delay per frequency range. This might also be of use in headphone spatial qualities testing.
accidental repost
accidental repost
Hmm, that's not quite what I'm looking for, as that's delay per channel. I'm looking for delay per frequency range. This might also be of use in headphone spatial qualities testing.
Hmm, that's not quite what I'm looking for, as that's delay per channel. I'm looking for delay per frequency range. This might also be of use in headphone spatial qualities testing.
Can EAPO set a delay over a frequency range? I'm trying to integrate my sub, and my AVR isn't up to snuff: I have no control over each channel. Furthermore, the sub is insufficiently exact. I'm thinking, that I can set a delay to all frequencies less than the crossover, which should result in better integration. I was hoping a convolution filter might be able to do this, but it seems not. Is such a delay feasible? Is it already implemented, and I simply can't find it? Thanks for the excellent work...
Here's the error message: clicking yes turne eae back on
I recall reading of an AES paper presented by Microsoft, and concerning some audio enhancements they were researching. I've no idea what came of this. I'll ask on audio science review - perhaps someone will know about this odd behaviour. Edit: here's the thread, in case one wishes to follow along: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/windows-setting-changes-frequency-response.24940/
I recall reading of an AES paper presented by Microsoft, and concerning some audio enhancements they were researching. I've no idea what came of this. I'll ask on audio science review - perhaps someone will know about this odd behaviour
I'm not so sure: I'm on Windows 10 LTSC 1809....
I took some measurements - interesting results! I tested with both MFX and SFX: MFX without the enable audio enhancements (eae) renders equaliser apo unusable; however, SFX works both with and without eae. Post-mix is used in all cases. In addition to changing the frequency response, eae also feeds some of the left channel in to the right channel. Interestingly, all of the measurements taken, despite not changing the volume - nor any other part of the setup - resulted in different levels: it seems...
I took some measurements - interesting results! I tested with both MFX and SFX: MFX without the enable audio enhancements (eae) renders equaliser apo unusable; however, SFX works both with and without eae. Post-mix is used in all cases. In addition to changing the frequency response, eae also feeds some of the left channel in to the right channel. Interestingly, all of the measurements taken, despite not changing the volume - nor any other part of the setup - resulted in different levels: it seems...
Recommendation to Enable audio enhancements Changes Frequency Response