I never thought of that, I just followed instructions to the letter, i.e., mic at ear height, or 1-2 inches above the high back of the couch, do all 8 positions, each position within 24 inches from the 1st position, do it when the room is quiet, set the HVAC fan to off, if a car drove by during a test, repeat that test etc., and I get good results, better than I could using REW and minidsp.
REW/minidsp did do a decent job for me after hours and hours of playing around, including trying different XOs, and sub crawling. I think Audyssey is more effective because like Dirac, it does its thing in both frequency and time domains. It gets better now with the app, I can within 5 dB 15-150 Hz, using 1/12 to 1/24 smoothing, and probably 6-8 dB with no smoothing at all. I have never tried averaging. I know you don't believe in EQ'ing above the transition point, the App allows you to pick exactly that point. To me, it is better to EQ it up to around 6-8 K, in order to sharpen up imaging. My theory is that the left and right channel's FR are quite different in my room, Audyssey EQ each channel individually so that helps. REW can do that too, but it seems to me most don't bother because doing it individually takes some thinking and planning, and there limited equalizers/filters you can use.
Below is from just one attempt, without using the Editor app yet, and no smoothing at all. I could never get it that good using REW and mindsp. After editing, I should be able to improve it further by 1.5-3 dB, I know so because I tried it already in my two channel system. The red one is with Audyssey turn off, so no TLSGuy thank but no thanks.
Note that the Audyssey off one already looks better due to the axis scale of 10 dB per division vs the 5 dB/division for the Audyssey ref curve.
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