MC wrote:pschelbert wrote:Fletcher-Munson is from 1933. since then the Loudness Curces are standardized by ISO, exactly ISO226 Edition 2003. This is the current standard. I guess this is implemented by RME.
Not at all. We added an improved version of the 'HiFi - simple analog electronics' standard, which works subjectively very nice when changing the volume level. We never said that we added one or the other exact standard.
pschelbert wrote:I use Loudness via acourateconvolver (www.audiovero.de). This convolution engine has ISO226, 2003 implemented.
I wasn't aware that Acourate can do that - impressive! But the decription is unclear, so you may be able to tell me how it works exactly:
- change the (EQ) curve respective to the currently chosen playback gain (fixed mode similar to the ADI's way of working)
- change the (EQ) curve respective to playback signal (the actual sample level in the respective frequency area). This would be the absolute real deal, as it takes the volumes of everything within the playback signal into account and processes it according to what its acoustic output level would require. Obviously this then equals a full FX processor that might make the music dynamically sound different than anything heard before, and therefore disliked (opens up the usual can of worms - yes, it is fully compensating the ear's loudness effect, but does not represent what the sound engineers heard when they mixed and mastered the playback...).
That said we think about a longer time to add such an FX ourself - make the Loudness not only work according to the VOL setting, but also the actual signal level. But then again the resources in the ADI are limited, and it would still use the existing, simple Bass/Treble scheme to do its work. We'll see.
Hi
it works off a referencelevel. This referencelevel can be set manually at a certain volume level (volume knob)
The refence level means no correction is made. If the volume is lower than the reference level then the correction is made according to IS226 2003. If the volume knob is higher, than the corrections will made also according the difference to ISO226 2003.
Now how to get the reference level.
1) I use JRiver EBU R128 to level all files psychoacoustically to the same level.
Then I play a cal-File (white noise) and calibrate the referenclevel of acourateconvolver to 85dB SPL.
So Volume knob 0dB= 85dB SPL (in acourateconvolver).
This assumes tha the mastering was made with 85dB SPL. This may be the case (for movies , SMTP standard says this), For music it may not be correct. Mastering engineers often ignore any standard!
No problem.
Acourateconvolver has an adjustment to adjust the reference level while playing +-10dB. Means the reference level can be adjusted if we go with above example from 75dB SPL to 95 dB SPL (reference level 85dB).
Okay acourateconvolver is a convolution engine capable of standard 65'000 taps (FIR filter) or more, depending on the power of the computer, sampling rate , number of channels.
Anyway.
The trick is to set a reference level on the volume knob. The user has to level all music with EBU R128 to the same level.
Calculate the EQ curve relative to this reference level observing ISO226 2003. This may be also possible with IIR filters.
So the EQ is just set to the differenc of refence levle and actual volume (voluem knob). Thsi should be pretty easy to do.
audiovero: Uli Brüggemann, the owner may have more info how it is implemented.
I just can say it works great (with my RME UFX II ).
Peter