Quote:
"85dB is Dolby 'reference' level. When the test pink noise is at a level of -20dBFS (20dB below 'full scale'), you adjust the meter to read 85dB. With a full scale signal, your peaks will reach 105dB (85+20). The test tones on Avia are at the required -20dB level and they are just telling you to adjust your channel trims so the meter reads 85dB to match Dolby reference standards.
You are correct that all that really matters is that all of the channels are equal - you can set your idea of 'reference' to anything you want. The idea is simply to have a mark on the dial that represents the maximum you would ever want to listen at. For Dolby standards, that is 0dB on the volume scale (for receviers with relative volume displays) and at that level the SPL is 85dB (as described above)."
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Ok, I think I get it. This is pretty interesting stuff. So what you're saying is that if I set my Denon 3802's volume to 0dB and play the test tones out of the avia disk, then I would calibrate the individual channel volumes to 85dB for 'reference' level sound. I think what the Avia disk fails to mention is that YOUR RECEIVER'S VOLUME SHOULD BE AT 0dB! and at that level, I would start with all of my channels at -12 dB, the lowest possible setting, and work up, because pink noise at 85dB, IMHO, is very hard to listen to (especially if the wife is home)! Then, if you want to listen to 10 dB below reference, I would just set the volume to -10. It takes the guesswork out of where to set your master volume when you want to watch a movie at reference, reference -10, etc. I'm sure this is old stuff to most, but just understanding it now is pretty cool (at least I think I understand it).
Thank you, and also thanks for the comments on the sub. It pretty much confirms what I thought, and when everything is calibrated you need to use your ears to be a final judge.