

- Online bass tuner harmonics install#
- Online bass tuner harmonics drivers#
- Online bass tuner harmonics driver#
Online bass tuner harmonics install#
If you are full beginner then directly install the app now and then you will know the value of this app! In this app, you can tune very easily and quickly. I love it! Thanks for making an awesome app. Not that the idea is impossible for crappy bass-less tweeter, but it doesn't seem right for the TOTL engineering from Senn.Not only is it a tuner (best app tuner I've used personally) but it also has a metronome, games, chords, and a plethora of instruments to choose from and it's SUPER easy to navigate. wasn't there some posts from Jude debunking it? I'm not sure about Tyll's idea for the hd800S. So long as the level of disto is high enough, of course it's going to impact what we're hearing.īut so does FR, and it's likely that FR variations between headphones are subjectively more important overall, simply because they impact even the loudest signal while THD is usually tens of dB below(if the headphone has like 15% THD, just kill it with fire). THD doing things to perceived bass, probably. So I really don't know that we can be confident about THD levels being the cause of subjective impressions. Meaning that subjectively, the music will sound different no matter what and the amount and quality of bass is likely to feel a little different because of how the brain judges tuning by how one freq is relatively to others.Īnd that's with a the mythical level of luck and controls while measuring and listening, and the extra assumption cherry on top, that there is no non audio bias involved. We're going to assume that the playback amps have very similar impedance values and will give the same final FR at the headphones.Įven in that carebear wonder-world where we do end up with a legit identical FR in the low end, we can still expect that the FR isn't going to be the same on both headphones for the rest of the audible range.

Also let's assume they're effectively the same headphones so there is no difference between the pairs measured and the ones you use. Somehow, we're lucky and the seal on the rig is identical to the one you get wearing them(fat chance if we also consider time passing and the pads sort of conforming to your head). Let's take all the ideal options, where the same rig very rigorously used, gave measurements for 2 headphones. The measurement thing is full of red flags IMO.

Could this be a rational explanation for the phenomenon commonly known as "bass slam"? Sure enough, I looked up THD measurements of the E-Mu Teak and its 2nd harmonic distortion was indeed about 13-14dB louder than the AKG K371 despite having sub-bass around the same level. I was willing to write this off as a certain quirk of the vented closed-back design until I read through an old article by Tyll Hertsens about the HD 800 S:
Online bass tuner harmonics driver#
In retrospect, the planar drivers' bass didn't sound any more impactful than other open-back, over-ear, dynamic driver headphones.

Online bass tuner harmonics drivers#
The E-Mu's biocellulose drivers had much deeper-feeling bass extension than Hifiman's planar drivers. In my own past experience, I have listened to a Hifiman HE-560 V1 and an E-Mu Teak side-by-side, volume-matched, and EQed to the same relative bass target. Another one that gets spread among those more "in the know" in the audiophile community is that "biocellulose drivers have much more bass slam than any driver type". A rumor I've often heard is that " planar magnetic drivers have more bass slam than dynamic drivers". According to online users, certain headphones have more "bass slam" despite their bass measuring equal with another headphone. One of the topics I see get brought up in subjective conversations about audio is "bass slam".
