Which speakers do you have and how far from the wall are they? The measured frequency response is well below the target curve at low frequencies so limiting the positive gain to 0.5dB means the target curve cannot be reached.They're Sonab OA14 – old Swedish speakers with a pretty cool design. The tweeters point upwards instead of forward, so the sound spreads out in all directions. They're what’s called “omnidirectional” or “ortho-acoustic” speakers, which basically means they’re made to fill the whole room with sound instead of just aiming at one spot. Sounds really open and natural – perfect for just chilling and listening.
They're Sonab OA14 – old Swedish speakers with a pretty unusual design. The tweeters point upwards instead of forward, so the sound spreads out in all directions. They're what’s called “omnidirectional” or “ortho-acoustic” speakers, which basically means they’re made to fill the whole room with sound instead of just aiming at one spot. Sounds really open and natural. Might not even work with room correction cause I got some very disappointing resaults from various settings, but I'm learning so it could also be the settings.
I am just trying to learn and was following some advice posted by @dominikz when the update came. So I never got the chance to try it using hes recommendations of setting it to 12.
"Max gain: 12dB
You need to have a high value here for the app to be able to bring down severe room resonances. A current limitation in the app is that the same max gain control affects both positive and negative gain filters, but this will apparently improve soon.
After the separate positive/negative max gain controls are implemented I'd suggest to keep the max positive gain below 3dB (preferably 0), and keep max negative gain at 12dB."
So that should make me settings above correct right? It really sounds terrible.