Let's spill the beans

A

Anglofun

Junior Audioholic
Apologies if there is a thread regarding this,

I am interested in this relatively new app, Magicbeansaudio. Has anyone tried it? Tried and using YPAO?

Questions being,

Figuring out the target curve? I know I need to address some acoustic issues in my room, does this app help pinpoint those very issues?

My understanding is with this app, we can see the rooms sound properties and also the speakers properties. You then sum the 2 together to get the response in your room. I am guessing here that then you would match a generic target curve ( B&K or Harmon etc etc) to match and fine tune your response to your preferences.

Does this sound right?
 
William Lemmerhirt

William Lemmerhirt

Audioholic Overlord
Well I’d say you may have the concept right, in that you measure the response near and far field and export the results into whatever will accept a peq input, and apply it to the output device. For ypao, I think it would have to be the web interface.
You also need to buy a umik-1, a mic stand and the satk to output the correct tones to the corresponding speaker. Plus, the basic license is 250 bucks, while the pro version is 400. It’s a really nice concept. But it’s much more involved than measuring with your phone and sending it to the AVR. I’d say this is designed for the installer level, or very, very serious home owner.

 
A

Anglofun

Junior Audioholic
Well I’d say you may have the concept right, in that you measure the response near and far field and export the results into whatever will accept a peq input, and apply it to the output device. For ypao, I think it would have to be the web interface.
You also need to buy a umik-1, a mic stand and the satk to output the correct tones to the corresponding speaker. Plus, the basic license is 250 bucks, while the pro version is 400. It’s a really nice concept. But it’s much more involved than measuring with your phone and sending it to the AVR. I’d say this is designed for the installer level, or very, very serious home owner.

Thanks. He (Joe) does provide a tutorial and I have done some measuring with REW. From what I have seen also, he seems to offer the service from a distance.

I am just wondering if there are members here that have used it and thought it was beneficial.
 
gene

gene

Audioholics Master Chief
Administrator
There is a big thread about this with Dr. Floyd Toole weighing in on post#4:

Bottom line, Dirac, Audyssey, Trinnov, Anthem ARC are far more sophisticated calibration tools with infinite configurability if you spend the time to learn them.
 
A

Anglofun

Junior Audioholic
There is a big thread about this with Dr. Floyd Toole weighing in on post#4:

Bottom line, Dirac, Audyssey, Trinnov, Anthem ARC are far more sophisticated calibration tools with infinite configurability if you spend the time to learn them.
Thank you for the input, I am assuming that since YPAO did not make the list, this could be an interesting option to learn ?
 
gene

gene

Audioholics Master Chief
Administrator
Thank you for the input, I am assuming that since YPAO did not make the list, this could be an interesting option to learn ?
YPAO correction is NOT great but the manual PEQ feature is very useful, especially since I got them to extend it down to bass frequencies. You should learn REW and make measurements yourself to get proper bass alignment with your subs and then EQ out the bumps in response across your listening area. Adjust bass level to taste but I typically have my bass boosted 5-6dB below 80Hz once its flattened.
 

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