The acoustics in my booth have changed and I am noticing some frequencies ‘ringing’ in there.
A high pass filter at 750hz 6dB roll-off seems to fix it pretty well. But I’m afraid that might be too much. It passes the AXC check…but I don’t know if it will pass the real QA check on ACX and get bounced back.
I’m not sure what the problem is, but I am still searching for it.
Thanks!
jlt
Trebor
January 31, 2023, 8:45pm
2
high-pass is too blunt a tool to combat resonance (ringing):
filter curve is capable of the precision required.
Plot spectrum will show where the problem lies:
This example is a booth ringing at 147Hz …
Thanks for the response. I’m not familiar with using that function. Is there a way to find out more about what it does? I’m looking at about 6 hrs of audio.
Trebor
February 1, 2023, 12:09am
4
“Plot spectrum” shows the relative amounts of each frequency in the audio
https ://manual.audacityteam.org/man/plot_spectrum.html
Any resonance (ringing) will show up as a peak on the graph.
(comparing the spectrums of the booth audio before & after the problem appeared will make it easy to spot)
Plot spectrum does not make any corrections, you have to do that manually via filter curve , Graphic EQ , or other equalizer plugin .
Thanks!
What is the best way to put that in my chain? I assume to take the frequency out early, then go about as normal?
This is what I am using…
EQ (adjusted)
Loudness Normalize
Limiter
Declicker
Noise Reduction (6,6,6)
…Also…what about a Notch Filter? Can that work as well? If so, how would that figure in to a chain?
Thanks again!
Trebor
February 1, 2023, 4:04pm
6
Attenuate the the ringing frequency, rather than take it out completely, (ideally dynamically ).
The change produced by a notch filter is a very deep cut, which will make the speech sound abnormal.
I was able to figure out the Frequency was at about 190-210 Hz…(a voice sweet spot). It is going to change the sound, but it think it will be ok.
passes specs, just not as full as I would like.
Would you mind giving it a listen to see how I did?
My mic arm was ringing like a tuning fork.
/uploads/default/original/3X/2/e/2e9bfd5c62cb7eb5a9300fc55b6fb16d70bb9abb.mp3
steve
February 1, 2023, 4:43pm
8
If the unwanted tone is a very narrow frequency band, then “Spectral Delete” might work well. See: https://manual.audacityteam.org/man/spectral_delete.html
For the narrowest possible filter band, the frequency selection should be just a line (zero height region).
Trebor
February 1, 2023, 5:08pm
9
That’s radical surgery: I suspect you’ve amputated more that was necessary to save the patient.
Trebor
February 1, 2023, 8:45pm
12
Don’t throw away the mic boom*, that just sounds like standard booth resonance ,
(in your case the main offenders 158Hz & 316Hz )
/uploads/default/original/3X/2/0/2043fc15cbbed8129f8a35c03bffe16802d9b761.flac
[*Changing the position of the mic in the booth can make resonance better or worse].
This is so helpful! Thank you!
Trebor
February 2, 2023, 1:23am
14
There are free EQ plugins which can be used to quickly fix the problem e.g. …
https://www.voxengo.com/product/overtonegeq/
I only just discovered the centre frequencies of the sliders in that plugin can be changed …
If you want a free plugin for dynamic EQ, (i.e. multiband compression)
see … https://www.tokyodawn.net/tdr-nova/