M
MDS
Audioholic Spartan
Jack Hammer
If changing the master volume setting has no affect on the loudness of the internal test tones then your receiver is one that automatically sets the volume level at 0 dB. So when using the auto-setup or doing it manually via the internal test tones, you are calibrating so that 0 on the volume display is reference level.
If you want to set it at any number other than 0 you'd have to use an external calibration disc like AVIA or DVE.
Say you think that the tones are just too loud and annoying but you do want to use 0 as the reference volume setting. Just use the calibration disc so you can control the volume and set the master volume at -10. Then calibrate so that the reading is 10 dB lower than what the target would normally be. If using AVIA, the test tones are at -20 dBFS so you'd normally want the SPL meter to read 85 dB. If you set the volume at -10 but get a reading of 75 dB on the meter that is the same as 85 dB at 0.
If changing the master volume setting has no affect on the loudness of the internal test tones then your receiver is one that automatically sets the volume level at 0 dB. So when using the auto-setup or doing it manually via the internal test tones, you are calibrating so that 0 on the volume display is reference level.
If you want to set it at any number other than 0 you'd have to use an external calibration disc like AVIA or DVE.
Say you think that the tones are just too loud and annoying but you do want to use 0 as the reference volume setting. Just use the calibration disc so you can control the volume and set the master volume at -10. Then calibrate so that the reading is 10 dB lower than what the target would normally be. If using AVIA, the test tones are at -20 dBFS so you'd normally want the SPL meter to read 85 dB. If you set the volume at -10 but get a reading of 75 dB on the meter that is the same as 85 dB at 0.