rsc1
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- Thread Starter
- #21
Instructions unclear. Threw the couch out of the window now blinds are gone and 3 birds live inside my house.Have you explored where the sound is coming from with your microphone? Hold it close to the speakers, then at various locations in the room, to see where that peak is strongest. It could be that you have something in the room that resonates at that high frquency.
Pull up the venetian blinds to see if that makes a difference. All those parallel slats might form some sort of interference grating or resonant structure.
I did, in fact, fix a light fixture yesterday that was vibrating and emitting a high frequency buzzing sound. Maybe that was it??
After discussing with the boss (wife), “we” have “both” decided that a thick, noise reducing curtain isn’t a great idea. She did make a good point - there’s not much light in the room to begin with. So I might have to go for a thin curtain. Hopefully that still does something.For starters put heavy thick curtains over the window, see how it measure if you flip the phase on sub and PEQ the first three peeks definitely crossed at 90 Hz (with phase that plays along better) and good luck.
That’s the reason I bought the Wharfedales. I get listening fatigue really easy, and it just doesn’t sound right at the moment. Really frustrating, but I guess a part of the audiophile journey is tinkering and fixing these little issues.The harsh sound effect can't come from this peak,whatever that is.Harsh is coming from the 3-5Khz and it's intolerable to some people (like me,so I know OP's pain,I wouldn't stand it for a minute)