06-09-2016, 12:21 PM
Hi Jake,
nice post. I just installed and tried the app - also for EPRHA US - and i got a similar graph.
"The base for all of the graph being -80khz."
Did you mean -80db?
"Is this Good or Bad??"
I am not 100% sure but I think it just means that the signal got quieter since you were further away. So it would only be bad if a -50db signal would be to quiet to understand at the location. Why not test it with a non-us track (maybe with an audiobook) loud enough that you geht a reocurring -30db peak at your laptop area and then stand up and go to your bread cutting area. If the signal also falls to -50db and you can still understand the spoken words everything should be fine.
Although I am not sure if you can treat US Signals the same as "normal" signals - that might be your question after all...
"If the sound isn't reaching me, then I'm assuming that simply increasing the volume on my laptop will fix this, correct?"
I think so, too. But I would always test the loudness with a normal track to prevent blowing your ears with the US track. Btw: Why not testing the loudness at your bread cutting area with the ocean and trickling tracks as shannon tells us to do?
nice post. I just installed and tried the app - also for EPRHA US - and i got a similar graph.
"The base for all of the graph being -80khz."
Did you mean -80db?
"Is this Good or Bad??"
I am not 100% sure but I think it just means that the signal got quieter since you were further away. So it would only be bad if a -50db signal would be to quiet to understand at the location. Why not test it with a non-us track (maybe with an audiobook) loud enough that you geht a reocurring -30db peak at your laptop area and then stand up and go to your bread cutting area. If the signal also falls to -50db and you can still understand the spoken words everything should be fine.
Although I am not sure if you can treat US Signals the same as "normal" signals - that might be your question after all...
"If the sound isn't reaching me, then I'm assuming that simply increasing the volume on my laptop will fix this, correct?"
I think so, too. But I would always test the loudness with a normal track to prevent blowing your ears with the US track. Btw: Why not testing the loudness at your bread cutting area with the ocean and trickling tracks as shannon tells us to do?