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how to tune an eq without rta?

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Old Apr 25, 2005 | 04:39 AM
  #22  
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the standard of judging from country to country
varies a massive amount the uk where heavily criticised about lots of things but like all iasca judges they judge to guidelines and rules so apart from the tonality section you judge to a book thats it

one of the things the uk was criticised for was the scoring for subbass low frequency extention scoring
we heard a lot of comments from guys saying "well normally i score an 18 on that "
yet when we judged it they scored a 12
obviously questions were asked and arguments ensued then when i took a couple of the disgruntled competitors inside there own cars and told them
exactly what we were listening for and then asked them to jump into another car which had been set up correctly they immeditedly heard the differnace and most said they had been setting up the subbass on a differant portion of the track
so is that the judges fault ?
its very easy to criticise judges when you havent set your car up properly in the first place i remember one particular person from canada which did exactlt this
the uk judges also give a lot of feedback to the competitors which we noticed wasnt happening from other judges
when we judge in the uk we spend ten to fifteen minutes with the competitor afterwards explaining what we heard in the car so as they can try and improve the next time they compete
how else are you supposed to improve ??
so as for the uk judges you may not like them because there not what your used to but as for ability i would say there up there with the best of the bunch
Old Apr 25, 2005 | 06:41 AM
  #23  
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Car audio is art, which places it in the subjective realm. I suppose you could measure spl, freq. response etc...but the actual sound quality is impossible to quantify.There will always be critics, but personal taste is paramount. That's why if it sounds good to you, that's all that mattters...just don't compete or expect to do well if you tune to your liking.
Old Apr 25, 2005 | 07:40 AM
  #25  
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i agree with youas far as just because somone knows what good sound is doesnt quantify him as a good tuner
i know this from personal experiance that my hearing is better than my tuning ability
which is why when tuning my car i allways try and have two sets of ears not one

as for the judging comments perhaps you should be asking why somone has got 18,s all year when
by there own admitance they havent set there car up to the correct part of the track
whichever way neither is wrong isqc was designed to see what the differances where between judging charecteristics from differant countries

i posted on a uk forum some time ago what exactly it was that the uk judges where looking for on the iasca disc
immediatedly i got some negative responses from some well known american competitors turns out they werent listening to the right part of the track or reading the inner sleeve of the disc either so what the uk guys were judging on was actually correct

ill post the link if anyone is interested in knowing what the uk guys use for referance
http://www.talkaudio.co.uk/vbb/showthread.php?t=78605
Old Apr 25, 2005 | 03:15 PM
  #27  
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The whole entire SQ-judging process, being subjective, means that it is virtually impossible to find the 'right' sound. Who says what 'correct' sound is? It can only be a general consensus of who? Experts? Experts at what? Listening? If you get a pool of judges who have been trained to listen for the same things, then they all go out to different competitions and are listening for those things. How are you to know what they listen for if you aren't trained the same way? So it really comes down to creating a car to hopefully create 'a' sound (not necessarily the 'right' sound) that is in tune with what that particular judge is looking for or trained to hear.

Variance in judges backgrounds on sound training I think can be helpful. Might make for some variance in scoring but if you know the judges all have different experiences in sound and audio and your car is getting scored consistent, I'd say you are doing good. If you get a pool of judges who tend to all follow the same opinion of one guy due to his reputation or because he's an opinionated loudmouth, then everyone else will tend to follow that same path of thinking. The margin for error is just massive.
Old Apr 26, 2005 | 08:27 AM
  #29  
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^ What's yours?



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