Specifications
EAW Smaart 6 Operation Manual Analysis Modes and Display Types
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Figure 3-11 Delay auto-locator buttons
Default settings for the Auto Sm and Auto Lg yield time windows of approximately
300 ms and 3 s, respectively. The Auto Sm default is appropriate for measuring delays
through electronic devices or acoustic measurements in small and medium rooms. The
default for Auto Lg is sufficient for acoustic measurements in medium and large rooms
but may need to be increased for measurements in very large or particularly reverberant
spaces. The size of the small and large time windows is determined by the sampling rate
and FFT sizes selected on the Impulse/Locator tab of the Options dialog.
The automatic delay locator is primarily used to find and compensate in for the time offset
between the reference and measurement signals in Frequency Response measurements,
although it can certainly be used for other purposes. After the Auto Small or Auto Large
routines run, a dialog appears to insert the signal delay found into the reference channel.
This dialog also displays the absolute polarity of the impulse response. The impulse
response polarity can determine the polarity of a single driver but may be misleading
when measuring multi-driver cabinets.
3.4 SPL Measurements
Smaart 6 receives its digital signal from the input device’s A/D section but with no
knowledge of the A/D converter’s voltage range or signal chain gain structure prior to
this point. To make accurate SPL measurements using Smaart, the analyzer must first
be calibrated to an external reference.
3.4.1 The Signal Level/SPL Readout
The top-right of the main window (above the Input Level Meters) displays the numeric
amplitude of one of the two input signals. In Real-time mode with Smaart 6 calibrated
to SPL, this readout emulates an ANSI/IEC standard Sound Level Meter (SLM).
NOTE: SPL measurements are valid only if Smaart 6 is calibrated to SPL (see page
57). Because this readout monitors only one input at a time, it should represent
the input channel carrying a mic signal when measuring SPL.