Gene, the issue you seem to have with the SMS-1 based on your linked post* has nothing to with the bug Josh, through his extraordinarily thorough review process, seems to have discovered in the DD18's software. The only real issue with the SMS-1 is that it doesn't include everything needed to take a proper measurement of the primary listening position. For that one needs to spend the extra coin for their MIC-5 to get a proper spatial average at the listening position. Or use an outboard measurement system such as
FuzzMeasure Pro, and move a single mic through 5-6 spots at the primary listening position, and then average the graphs in software.
*The "problem" you identify is limited resolution due to 1/3-octave smoothing. But in the modal region that isn't really a big deal. Perhaps 1/6 octave resolution would be marginally better, but anything higher than that really just has people chasing nonexistent "problems." Especially if they rely on single-point measurements instead of a proper spatial average. Before you throw the quote from Dr. Toole at the bottom of your linked article into the mix please note that his own bass measurements in
Sound Reproduction are considerably smoothed, often to as low as 1/4 octave or only slightly finer than the SMS-1's display. See Toole, at 55-6, 145, 186, 232, 235-6, 247.)
What Josh deduced is a 1/2-octave
shift in the display has absolutely nothing to do with measurement resolution. It's a software bug, pure and simple. Hopefully one that's fairly easy for Velodyne to fix and push out a firmware update to correct.
Again, here's the relevant quote, truncated for clarity:
The SMS-1, and presumably the ur-DD subs, don't have that issue.
Funny, nobody disagreed with that, at least assuming you don't consider a closeout ur-DD series Velodyne sub "on the market"
(Though of course if one needs a separate measurement system to get good results anyway, that begs the question of why the EQ should be onboard instead of in a dedicated unit such as a miniDSP or Berry DCX...)
With the caveat that I haven't heard the one system that might actually be worth something, JBL's BassQ, agreed. None of the other autocal systems even make a pretense of being able to properly set up modern subwoofer systems (i.e. ones that employ multiple varied units around the room to smooth modal region response and boost overall efficiency in the first-mode region). I hope somebody soon makes a automated subwoofer processor that's worth something, based on an iterative process such as Harman's SFM or Geddes' methods. I'll buy it (at least assuming it's not at a Krell/Levinson price-point) even though I'm perfectly capable of setting things up manually, just for the time savings and to support that rarest of things in modern audio: actual thought applied to real problems.