Any one else using DIRAC or silimalr for 2 channel set uo?


I finally got around to running some cat6e to my Arcam SR250 which enabled me to run Dirac room correction. I used a umik-1 and my laptop for measurements and I am very impressed. After about 3 weeks of listening I am very happy. I had some bass bloat in the lower end that Dirac cleaned up nicely. Just curious if anyone else is running any room correction on a stereo set up.
128x128guy-incognito
I’m using ARC Genesis with my Anthem STR integrated amp and quite happy with the results. 
We always encourage customers to use passive room treatment whenever possible. That said, using room correction can have great benefits. Not all room correction systems are equal. Some of the software add-on systems are OK but not state-of-the-art. We use the Trinnov ST2 with our system. One of the best systems available. Truly SOTA.

https://www.trinnov.com/st2-hifi/

I was pretty happy prior to running DIRAC but I have a tendency to favor a little extra bass in the low end. After running DIRAC the sub integrated much better and my wife stopped complaining about things being "so boomy".

This is the best case scenario, but important to remember a lot of systems with automatic room EQ/correction still allow you to do manual adjustments.

I too favor adding more bass than "perfect."

Also important to note that these systems are not identical, and stuck in time. Dirac today is different than it was 5 years ago. In the end, the choices made by these systems are tuned by humans, not oscilloscopes. You should listen to them in the store before buying. Right now though, JL Audio, Dirac and Anthem make systems I can recommend in general for doing things well.

And... EQ of all kinds is always improved by good room treatment. If you can treat the room, do that first. If you cannot, EQ is often much better than doing nothing.

Best,

E


My system is dual purpose (tv and music) in our main family room so wife acceptance factor is important. So no bass traps or sound diffusers on the walls. DIRAC really improved things for me overall. I was pretty happy prior to running DIRAC but I have a tendency to favor a little extra bass in the low end. After running DIRAC the sub integrated much better and my wife stopped complaining about things being "so boomy". 
I agree when the room correction is off the sound blossoms but in my case not in a good way. Bass overwhelms, soundstage closes, sweet spot shrinks but it does sound louder. As I mentioned my room is less than ideal, like everything your experience will vary.
I was under the illusion that my room corrections with Dirac and other software made things better. For 3 years I listened. Then one day I took the correction out of the loop and the sound blossomed, for the better. Never looked back. Sure it tames bass, but it messes up everything else. Too much downside, artifacts, seating restrictions etc. not to mention a non-lifelike sound.
I've  used Dirac and ARC they both work pretty good at taming boomy bass which I have never liked. I prefer hearing the notes. They also do a pretty good job helping those of us with less than ideal rooms getting excellent sound.
Very nice. I wasn't aware Roon had any room correction capabilities. I recently dipped a toe into streaming with a node 2I and a Benchmark DAC 2 HGC but prior to the Arcam was in the multichannel AVR camp. I have yet to dig deep into Roon as an option.

I have seen previous posts where you have made reference to building your own speakers in the past but have not ever seen a link to the final product. Your monitors look good. It appears our strengths are opposite as I'd be much more comfortable building the boxes and outsourcing the components and crossovers.
Congrats!!

Yep, trimming the bass exaggerations is something a lot of folks can benefit from.

I'm not surnning Dirac, but I am using Roon to clean up similar issues.  You can read the details here:

https://speakermakersjourney.blogspot.com/2020/01/the-snr-1-room-response-and-roon.html

Works quite nicely.  I'm particularly happy about keeping the EQ in the digital domain before my fancy DAC. :)