Do your Mains really fall off the cliff at 4kHz??
Do your Mains really fall off the cliff at 4kHz??
[Edit] A little research and I gather it's most likely the iPhone 14 Pro mic I'm using. I also read that I should probably drop that RoomFit EQ range down to 500Hz or so. Thoughts?Do your Mains really fall off the cliff at 4kHz??

I did not start anything and certainly not as you call it a class warfare, how you came to that conclusion is beyond me. I made a general comment on how it makes me sad the charlatans and their believers are pressuring people into buying stuff they don't need (and often can't really afford)Dude! YOU STARTED this.
You're the one that started the class warfare statement. If you disagree with me you have several options:
(1) Ignore me
(2) Reply in kind - trust me, you won't insult me. I'll actually enjoy a good discussion.
(3) Go the Miss Manners route - figures... I'll send you some smelling salts.
(4) Misconstrue the meaning and nature of my comments and start an ad hominem attack - well... see (1) above.
Get over it.
Is it possible that English is not your first language and you completely misunderstand and misrepresent the idioms and mannerisms of American English? It is a fairly direct way of expression...
( In the US, we call that statement a way to give you a graceful exit from the argument ).
Mind you, American English is my 4th language, but somehow I cultivated it since I live here.
In the meantime... I'm thinking of swapping the amp... I have this Nuforce STA-200 that I bought years ago, store demo, 400 bucks! It has no right to sound sooo good for that price. It was a steal actually.
Wiim products are an phenomenal for the money - there's no question about it. I honestly feel they occupy a space now largely without any meaningful competition when you factor in overall performance, interoperability, flexibility, ease of use, and overall app functionality. My comment wasn't an attack on Wiim, just a musing about my own usage matrix vs what it tries to offer.Wiim products are a steal considering what they can do. Most people use the bells and whistles just fine. The sidelining is what you chose to do, so you made yourself sad i guess?
It is either due to the phone mic, or due to phone orientation vs speakers. For more accurate response measurement you should remove the phone protective case (if any) before measuring, and orient the bottom phone mic towards the speakers. But really the only way to get an accurate measurement is to use a calibrated measurement mic (like e.g. miniDSP UMIK-1 or Dayton iMM-6c). However that might not necessarily give you a better result after correction (that depends on how close your phone mic response is to the calibrated mic at low frequencies - this is unfortunately impossible to tell, it varies from phone to phone)![Edit] A little research and I gather it's most likely the iPhone 14 Pro mic I'm using.
RoomFit measures all frequencies regardless of settings - the "Freq" range only specifies where it applies the *correction*.No... Isn't that what most see at the end of a RoomFit measurement?
I figured that 'cliff' is because RoomFit is only acting on / measuring frequencies up to ~4kHz (in my case - I think that's the default):
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Default settings in RoomFit are unfortunately far from ideal. In your case IMO there isn't much reason for correction above about 100Hz, so I'd advise to set the upper limit for correction to 300Hz (setting it lower is ignored by RoomFit - see the discussion here).The WiiM Ultra's subwoofer config/support,what I bought it for, seems to work well. I like using RoomFit targeting a Flat curve with Variable smoothing... At a 100Hz crossover for the SB100Pro and CS5-M2 mains, things seem to measure pretty well:
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Thank you for your detailed response!It is either due to the phone mic, or due to phone orientation vs speakers. For more accurate response measurement you should remove the phone protective case (if any) before measuring, and orient the bottom phone mic towards the speakers. But really the only way to get an accurate measurement is to use a calibrated measurement mic (like e.g. miniDSP UMIK-1 or Dayton iMM-6c). However that might not necessarily give you a better result after correction (that depends on how close your phone mic response is to the calibrated mic at low frequencies - this is unfortunately impossible to tell, it varies from phone to phone)!
RoomFit measures all frequencies regardless of settings - the "Freq" range only specifies where it applies the *correction*.
I'm glad you mentioned this - my Flat curve choice is driven by my desire to get things as close to 'studio-neutral' as possible with RoomFit, then adjust preference with EQ. Because my Ultra-connected SVS subwoofer on the ground floor is also supporting two (WiiM Pro-connected) stereo speakers aimed at my Loft listening area directly above it, I accept that would be applying a PEQ to boost the bass to a compromise between the two floors... which segues to your next point:Default settings in RoomFit are unfortunately far from ideal. In your case IMO there isn't much reason for correction above about 100Hz, so I'd advise to set the upper limit for correction to 300Hz (setting it lower is ignored by RoomFit - see the discussion here).
It is perhaps worth mentioning that the "flat" target is intended for listening in relative nearfield (e.g. desktop systems) in well-damped rooms.
If your room is a typical residential room the "B&K" target is the better choice.
Interesting about the bass reduction in stereo RoomFit vs mono... ironically my recent challenge had been controlling the bass room gain in this space... it's a smooth but unfinished concrete floor with 20" of painted concrete at the base of the walls. I initially used a Fosi SW10 subwoofer (bottom firing; rear-ported) that had its gain/volume dialed down and RoomFit still worked to control the bass. I replaced the floor-standing Fosi with an SVS SB-1000 Pro, which I placed off of the concrete floor on my 'shelf of sound'Also, note that using "stereo" variant of RoomFit will give you about 3dB less bass compared to "individual channel" RoomFit even if both are run with the exact same target. This has been discussed e.g. here, with a more complete explanation here.
So a combination of "flat" target together "stereo" RoomFit might result in relative bass deficiency. However, that might just be your personal preference, and si perfectly OK! The amount of bass is anyway largely a matter of personal preference (see the large gray area in this figure which illustrates the spread of personal preference range found in research).

I certainly will look at the FAQ, and your reply has helped! Thanks againLastly, have a look at this FAQ article for some practical recommendations of RoomFit settings.
(I'd just recommend "variable" over "1/12" smoothing - the FAQ article was written before "variable" became available.)
Hope this helps!
I gather the Q Concerto Meta has an easier division of labor for the Uni-Q coaxial drivers... The LS50 apparently has a somewhat beefed up Uni-Q driver as it does heavier bass extension duty down to ~90Hz or so by design, whereas the Concerto's woofer's crossover with the Uni-Q is at ~450Hz. I suspect the Concerto's Uni-Q barely moves in comparison to the LS50's. Any idea why the LS50 Meta is currently the more expensive choice?Q Concerto Meta is a nice, solid buy at open-box pricing. Doesn't give up a ton to R3 Metas, and would pair up really nicely to SB-1000 Pro. The imaging ability of KEF Uni-Q is straight-up legendary--you will LOVE it if you do it! Doesn't have the headroom/bass limits of LS50 Meta, yet doesn't particularly give up a ton in terms of accuracy or detail extraction versus LS50 Meta; having owned LS50 Meta in the past, I'd take Q Concerto Meta over it any time, day, or place.
Maybe not so much now, but in the past, the LS50 Meta were in the same class/grouping as the Blades 1 and 2 Meta on their web site. The cabinet construction as well as grade of Uni-Q driver on the LS50 Meta are more in line with the Blades Meta than with the Q series. If you open up the LS50 Metas, the quality of build and materials (crossovers, enclosures, etc.) is closer to R Meta series than to Q Meta series. Basically you're paying for better quality components, materials, and build.I gather the Q Concerto Meta has an easier division of labor for the Uni-Q coaxial drivers... The LS50 apparently has a somewhat beefed up Uni-Q driver as it does heavier bass extension duty down to ~90Hz or so by design, whereas the Concerto's woofer's crossover with the Uni-Q is at ~450Hz. I suspect the Concerto's Uni-Q barely moves in comparison to the LS50's. Any idea why the LS50 Meta is currently the more expensive choice?
Most subwoofers are too damn big to sit on a shelf@BMeek I've wondered about the location of your woofer up on the wall.
Most subwoofers -in a box- are designed to be on the floor, along the back wall, so they "see" a quarter of the room. Your location is such that the woofer sees half the room. This might make the bass frequency response a little lumpier as now you have to deal with bass reflections from the floor...
Have you played with locating the new woofer on the floor?

One of these?Since we seem to constantly bring up KEF.... the only ones that interest me are the KEF LS60 Wireless. but I don't know you can stream Tidal Connect to them.. .and I don't see how to get my turntable, FM tuner and NAS into them.
Indeed, how can you connect analog sources into any of the wireless speakers from KEF?
www.audiosciencereview.com
So with the Concerto, I may be replacing the LS50 Uni-Q's sweet spot between 100-500Hz with the aluminum woofer's output on the Concertos. I had been leaning toward the LS50's lower Uni-Q driver height, and depending on their wider directivity, given that they'll be elevated at standing/barstool ear-level, when I also spend a fair amount of time listening at a lower off-axis seating position.Maybe not so much now, but in the past, the LS50 Meta were in the same class/grouping as the Blades 1 and 2 Meta on their web site. The cabinet construction as well as grade of Uni-Q driver on the LS50 Meta are more in line with the Blades Meta than with the Q series. If you open up the LS50 Metas, the quality of build and materials (crossovers, enclosures, etc.) is closer to R Meta series than to Q Meta series. Basically you're paying for better quality components, materials, and build.
-Ed
One of these?
![]()
MINIDSP Adept ADC & Phono Preamp Review
This is a review and detailed measurements of the MINIDSP Adept analog to digital converter and phono equalization/capture. It was sent to me by the company and costs US $299. The device is rather attractive for its class. User interface though, is unusual. You push the rotary encoder in and...www.audiosciencereview.com
The wider range of directivity makes off-axis listening less sensitive anyway. This is the case for any coaxials. One of a multitude of reasons why I prefer coaxial speakers.So with the Concerto, I may be replacing the LS50 Uni-Q's sweet spot between 100-500Hz with the aluminum woofer's output on the Concertos. I had been leaning toward the LS50's lower Uni-Q driver height, and depending on their wider directivity, given that they'll be elevated at standing/barstool ear-level, when I also spend a fair amount of time listening at a lower off-axis seating position.
Those Tannoys aren’t all that different from my own speakers. MoFi SourcePoint 8, themselves just a, “miniaturized,” SourcePoint 10. Masterpiece design by Andrew Jones; I’ve endgamed with these.@EddNog Coax speakers are indeed great for imaging... we have the Elac Unifi 2 and they are pinpoint. However, once you move away, say 10 feet, it doesn't make so much of a difference. Mini monitors with a tweeter placed right next to the small "woofer" image just as well as the coax designs. My AE1s belong in that genre -although a 4" woofer is sort of pushing the concept... ;-)
Coaxial Speaker Kits | Point Source Audio | Madisound
Coaxial driver speaker kits. Time-aligned designs, KEF & SEAS-based projects. Ships worldwide. Call (608) 831-3433 for free advice.www.madisoundspeakerstore.com
You ought to hear these.... ugly as sin and my wife will never let me have them in the living room... but the imaging, resolution and the voice (midrange) is fantastic...
Tannoy | Product | STIRLING GR-OW
www.tannoy.com
BUT, the best are simply full range with no crossover. Sure they have limitations, but within those, they are simply superb. Check out the Fostex and MarkAudio speakers.
Here's a very interesting write up by Bruno Putzeys about speakers, crossovers, etc... I think you will all enjoy what he says.
![]()
Active Speakers—The Second Wave, by Bruno Putzeys, Part 1 of 2 (Unabridged)
What can active speakers do that passive ones can’t? Impulse response, impulse response, impulse response, says Bruno Putzeys. That, and their sheer practicality, makes them the wave of the future.pmamagazine.org
Active Speakers—The Second Wave, by Bruno Putzeys, Part 2 of 2
Bruno Putzeys concludes his two-part series that explains why active speakers are inherently better than passive ones.pmamagazine.org
What I'll say will be counter-intuitive (and is often misunderstood), but I ask you to bear with meI'm glad you mentioned this - my Flat curve choice is driven by my desire to get things as close to 'studio-neutral' as possible with RoomFit, then adjust preference with EQ.
OK, so you found the response bass-deficient as well - that is not surprising! And I see you compensated for this with PEQ - this approach is valid as well; you can absolutely use any target in RoomFit and then use EQ to tune bass to taste.here's what I've been applying on my downstairs Ultra [post-Flat & Variable-RoomFit] in order to restore the weaker bass mix that I had noticed while helping the upstairs speakers in the Speaker Group cope with my unfinished Juniper wood decking between listeners and the subwoofer:
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I saved this as "PostRoomFitBassBump". Also, the 2 speakers in the loft get a steep HPF at 100z and a few other tweaks in a PEQ table applied at the WiiM Pro.
Honestly, when I have access to room correction (like RoomFit) I usually see room gain as free headroom - so 100% a good thing.ironically my recent challenge had been controlling the bass room gain in this space... it's a smooth but unfinished concrete floor with 20" of painted concrete at the base of the walls. I initially used a Fosi SW10 subwoofer (bottom firing; rear-ported) that had its gain/volume dialed down and RoomFit still worked to control the bass.
Glad to hear that! Good luck!your reply has helped! Thanks again![]()
It is worth mentioning that not everybody agrees about the importance of impulse-response fidelity, e.g.: Zero Phase In Studio MonitorsBUT, the best are simply full range with no crossover. Sure they have limitations, but within those, they are simply superb. Check out the Fostex and MarkAudio speakers.
Here's a very interesting write up by Bruno Putzeys about speakers, crossovers, etc... I think you will all enjoy what he says.
![]()
Active Speakers—The Second Wave, by Bruno Putzeys, Part 1 of 2 (Unabridged)
What can active speakers do that passive ones can’t? Impulse response, impulse response, impulse response, says Bruno Putzeys. That, and their sheer practicality, makes them the wave of the future.pmamagazine.org
Active Speakers—The Second Wave, by Bruno Putzeys, Part 2 of 2
Bruno Putzeys concludes his two-part series that explains why active speakers are inherently better than passive ones.pmamagazine.org