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Your questions answered: Sonarworks Reference calibration tools
Thursday December 27, 2018. 07:13 PM , from Create Digital Music
If getting your headphones and studio monitors calibrated sounds like a good New Years’ Resolution, we’ve got you covered. Some good questions came up in our last story on Sonarworks Reference, the automated calibration tool, so we’ve gotten answers for you.
First, if you’re just joining us, Sonarworks Reference is a tool for automatically calibrating your studio listening environment and headphones so that the sound you hear is as uncolored as possible – more consistent with the source material. Here’s our previous write-up, produced in cooperation with Sonarworks: What it’s like calibrating headphones and monitors with Sonarworks tools CDM is partnering with Sonarworks to help users better understand how to use the tool to their benefit. And so that means in part answering some questions with Sonarworks engineers. If you’re interested in the product, there’s also a special bundle discount on now: you get the True-Fi mobile app for calibration on your mobile device, free with a Sonarworks Studio Edition purchase (usually US$79): https://try.sonarworks.com/christmasspecial/ Readers have been sending in questions, so I’ll answer as many as I can as accurately as possible. Does it work? Oh yeah, this one is easy. I found it instantly easier to mix both on headphones and sitting in the studio, in that you hear far more consistency from one listening environment / device to another, and in that you get a clearer sense of the mix. It feels a little bit like how I feel when I clean my eyeglasses. You’re removing stuff that’s in the way. That’s my own personal experience, anyway; I linked some full reviews and comparisons with other products in the original story. But my sense in general is that automated calibration has become a fact of life for production and live situations. It doesn’t eliminate the role of human experts, not by a long shot – but then color calibration in graphics didn’t get rid of the need for designers and people who know how to operate the printing press, either. It’s just a tool. Does it work when outside of the sweet spot in the studio? This is a harder question, actually, but anecdotally, yeah, I still left it on. You’re calibrating for the sweet spot in your studio, so from a calibration perspective, yeah, you do want to sit in that location when monitoring – just as you always would. But a lot of what Sonarworks Reference is doing is about frequency response as much as space, I found it was still useful to leave the calibration on even when wandering around my studio space. It’s not as though the calibration suddenly stops working when you move around. You only notice the calibration stops working if you have the wrong calibration profile selected or you make the mistake of bouncing audio with it left on (oops). But that’s of course exactly what you’d expect to happen. What about Linux support? Linux is officially unsupported, but you can easily calibrate on Windows (or Mac) and then use the calibration profile on Linux. It’s a 64-bit Linux-native VST, in beta form. If you run the plug-in the handy plug-in host Carla, you can calibrate any source you like (via JACK). So this is really great – it means you can have calibrated results while working with SuperCollider or Bitwig Studio on Linux, for example. This is beta only so I’m really keen to hear results. Do let us know, as I suspect if a bunch of CDM readers start trying the Linux build, there will be added incentive for Sonarworks to expand Linux support. And we have seen some commercial vendors from the Mac/Windows side (Pianoteq, Bitwig, Renoise, etc.) start to toy with support of this OS. If you want to try this out, go check the Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1751390588461118/ (Direct compiled VST download link is available here, though that may change later.) What’s up with latency? You get a choice of either more accuracy and higher latency, or lower accuracy and lower latency. So if you need real-time responsiveness, you can prioritize low latency performance – and in that mode, you basically won’t notice the plug-in is on at all in my experience. Or if you aren’t working live / tracking live, and don’t mind adding latency, you can prioritize accuracy. Sonarworks clarifies for us: Reference 4 line-up has two different *filter* modes – zero latency and linear phase. Zero latency filter adds, like the name states, zero latency, whereas linear phase mode really depends on sample-rate but typically adds about 20ms of latency. These numbers hold true in plugin form. Systemwide, however, has the variable of driver introduced latency which is set on top of the filter latency (zero for Zero latency and approx 20ms for linear phase mode) so the numbers for actual Systemwide latency can vary depending on CPU load, hardware specs etc. Sometimes on MacOS, latency can get up to very high numbers which we are investigating at the moment. What about loudness? Will this work in post production, for instance? Some of you are obviously concerned about loudness as you work on projects where that’s important. Here’s an explanation from Sonarworks: So what we do in terms of loudness as a dynamic range character is – nothing. What we do apply is overall volume reduction to account for the highest peak in correction to avoid potential clipping of output signal. This being said, you can turn the feature off and have full 0dBFS volume coming out of our software, controlled by either physical or virtual volume control. Which headphones are supported? There’s a big range of headphones with calibration profiles included with Sonarworks Reference. Right now, I’ve got that folder open, and here’s what you get at the moment: AIAIAI TMA-1 AKG K72, K77, K121, K141 MKII, K240, K240 MKII, K271 MKII, K550 MKII, K553 Pro, K612 Pro, K701, K702, K712 Pro, K812, Q701 Apple AirPods Audeze KCD-2, LCD-X Audio-Technica ATH-M20x, M30x, M40x, M50x, M70x, MSR7, R70x Beats EP, Mixr, Pro, Solo2, Solo3 wireless, Studio (2nd generation), X Average Beyerdynamic Custom One Pro, DT 150, DT 250 80 Ohm, DT 770 Pro (80 Ohm, 32 Ohm PPRO, 80 Ohm Pro, 250 Ohm Pro), DT 990 Pro 250 Ohm, DT 1770 Pro, DT 1990 Pro (analytical + balanced), T 1 Blue Lola, Mo-Fi (o/On+) Bose QuietComfort 25, 35, 35 II, SoundLink II Bowers & Wilkins P7 Wireless Extreme Isolation EX-25, EX-29 Focal Clear Professional, Clear, Listen Professional, Spirit Professional Fostex TH900 mk2, TX-X00 Grado SR60e, SR80e HiFiMan HE400i HyperX Cloud II JBL Everest Elite 700 Koss Porta Pro Classic KRK KNS 6400, 8400 Marshall Major II, Monitor Master & Dynamic MH40 Meze 99, 99 NEO Oppo PM-3 Philips Fidelio X2HR, SHP9500 Phonen SMB-02 Pioneer HDJ-500 Plantronics BackBeat Pro 2 PreSonus HD 7 Samson SR850 Sennheiser HD, HD 25 (&0 Ohm, Light), HD-25-C II, HD 201, HD 202, HD 205, HD 206, HD 215-II, HD 280 Pro (incl. new facelift version), HD 380 Pro, HD 518, HD 598, HD 598 C, HD 600, HD 650, HD 660, HD 700, HD 800, HD 800 S, Moometum On-Ear Wireless, PX 100-II Shure SE215, SRH440, SRH840, SRH940, SRH1440, SRH1540, SRH1840 Skullcandy Crusher (with and without battery), Hesh 2.0 Sony MDR-1A, MDR-1000X, MDR-7506, MDR-7520, MDR-CD900ST, MDR-V150, MDR-XB450, MDR-XB450AP, MDR-XB650BT, MDR-XB950AP, BDR-XB950BT, MDR-Z7, MDR-XZ110, MDR-ZX110AP, MDR-ZX310, MR-XZ310AP, MDR-ZX770BN, WH-1000MX2 Status Audio CB-1 Superlux HD 668B, HD-330, HD681 Ultrasone Pro 580i, 780i, Signature Studio V-Moda Crossfade II, M-100 Yamaha HPH-MT5, HPH-MT7, HPH-MT8, HPH-MT220 So there you have it – lots of favorites, and lots of … well, actually, some truly horrible consumer headphones in the mix, too. But I not lots of serious mixers like testing a mix on consumer cans. The advantage of doing that with calibration is presumably that you get to hear the limitations of different headphones, but at the same time, you still hear the reference version of the mix – not the one exaggerated by those particular headphones. That way, you get greater benefit from those additional tests. And you can make better use of random headphones you have around, clearly, even if they’re … well, fairly awful, they can be now still usable. Even after that long list, I’m sure there’s some stuff you want that’s missing. Sonarworks doesn’t yet support in-ear headphones for its calibration tools, so you can rule that out. For everything else, you can either request support or if you want to get really serious, opt for individual mail-in calibration in Latvia. More: https://www.sonarworks.com/reference The post Your questions answered: Sonarworks Reference calibration tools appeared first on CDM Create Digital Music.
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