I installed the Direc Live software on my office-based stereo last month, and so I've had a little bit of time to get used to the effects. I've had no previous experience with DRC other than reading reviews for the Tact preamps several years ago which planted the seed, so I thought if there was ever a time when processing power and software could make this technology available (and upgrade-able), I'd try it out because on paper it seems to make sense. Well, I guess that time came. Cut to the chase- it is an improvement...at least to the extent that I'm in a very nearfield arrangement, with my mini-monitors on either side of a 27" computer monitor, with my ears approximately 30-36" from the speakers in a near equal lateral triangle. I'm not a pro reviewer, so I'll try not to mix BS with flowery English. The biggest difference I noticed was in the area of "focus". The software does you a nice favor, in that you can easily engage or disengage the filter with the click of a mouse, for immediate A/B comparison. There isn't so much a difference in timbre, or voicing as much as a higher sense of 3d placement within the sound field in front of you. I know it sounds a bit cliche, but there seems to be more space between the instruments and performers with the filter engaged, with more clarity and individual spatial placement resulting from the separation. The same is true of the micro-acoustic reverberation in natural space. String decays, on guitars and pianos and cymbal strikes seem much more realistic, because they're not stuck in a muddy mess. I think I've got a pretty good setup for an office, which I kind of felt was the bees knees, but when you do an a/b comparison....well good equipment just can't compete with poor room effects. I was particularly interested to see if poor speakers could become excellent just by correcting the room, but now things sound so good, I don't want to mess around experimenting when there's so much music out there to be heard. Now that I'm used to corrected sound, I'm in no hurry to tinker.
Unexpected bonuses: It was enlightening to see the graph of my speaker's output. Mine are a hybrid of home-brew based on the old Radio Shack Linaeum minimonitor. I replaced the front baffle, built a high-end crossover, dropped in a 5" Audax Aerogel driver in a sealed enclosure with plumbers clay dampening the aluminum case. I also have a powered sub. The graph showed that my sub's volume is probably too high, [I set it initially by ear, and most of my listening is pretty low volume level, so I probably boosted too much for the calibration-level tests] the graph showed there was a bump that disappeared at 100hz, where I had set my low-pass. I also noticed good smooth performance above my xover point of 5000, but attenuated about 5db. In future crossover designs I'll correct this, but for now it doesn't matter, because its all corrected in the digital realm. I'm really impressed with the resultant "sound". Especially since I've created filters for quiet listening and normal listening. On the weekends, or working late, I tend to crank to realistic levels, but during the workday, things are pretty quiet. I have to mention the neat trick I read about in one of the earlier DIRAC reviews, where I constructed a filter specifically for quiet listening, where I basically set the target at -20db, so that the filter could handle the entire spectrum of EQ mods without strain. For playback, I raise back up to zero with the preamp volume knob, which is a stunning effect, especially with a boosted bass and treble, to account for my ear's lack of sensitivity at low volumes [google the articles if you want a more technical description about how filters only cut, they don't boost].
Now the summing-up conclusion: I've been an audio nut for close to 40 years, and I've spent a fortune chasing this speaker or that preamp hoping for that "not too subtle" difference that will be worth the upgrade. Only a few times can I remember a "real" difference worth writing about, and this is my first-ever writing on anything audio. Truth is, when you get to a front-end rig that's over $3k, all the differences in sound will be small to minute, unless your spending goes exponential. This is my personal experience, and now that I have middle-aged ears, I'm probably not hearing all the best stuff anyway. I can say without reservation, that DRC is absolutely an improvement--even at a ruler-flat setting. Again with the cliche--a veil really seems to lift away and the muddiness that you weren't even aware of transforms into realistic clarity. (not like placing dimes or pebbles on your speakers, or coloring your CD's green at the edges, but non-audio friends even notice the difference) If you start tweaking the filter curves, it should be theoretically possible to replicate your favorite colorations from yesteryear, (I'm seeing an aftermarket biz opportunity in selling classic Marantz tube curves, etc) but I'm done playing. I like the realism of this new PC audio so much, maybe I'll just leave it alone and enjoy the music, which I'm rediscovering again in a joyous manner.
Office system: Levinson 37, 380s & 360s feeding BelCanto (B&O ICE) digital amp into self modified Radio Shack speakers and powered Yamaha sub. Computer is home-built quad core i7 haswell with passive cooling, PCI-e drive containing op system and audio software powered by a Mojo Audio Joule 3 linear power supply and feeding SPDIF coax direct from motherboard socket to the 360s via illuminations D60 with JRiver Media software. I'm running all at 24/96k, which is the Levinson's upper limit. The DIRAC software is currently limited to 96k sampling, but I understand a 192 version is on the way. I think the DIRAC Live is an excellent product, and even at low volumes, its a game changer.
I've skipped over describing the many hours of learn-by-doing. configuring computer; JRiver software, calibrating microphones, setting listener calibrations (painfully loud) but in the end there's no regrets. Bottom line- you should try this software, it makes more a difference in listening experience than anything in recent memory.
Unexpected bonuses: It was enlightening to see the graph of my speaker's output. Mine are a hybrid of home-brew based on the old Radio Shack Linaeum minimonitor. I replaced the front baffle, built a high-end crossover, dropped in a 5" Audax Aerogel driver in a sealed enclosure with plumbers clay dampening the aluminum case. I also have a powered sub. The graph showed that my sub's volume is probably too high, [I set it initially by ear, and most of my listening is pretty low volume level, so I probably boosted too much for the calibration-level tests] the graph showed there was a bump that disappeared at 100hz, where I had set my low-pass. I also noticed good smooth performance above my xover point of 5000, but attenuated about 5db. In future crossover designs I'll correct this, but for now it doesn't matter, because its all corrected in the digital realm. I'm really impressed with the resultant "sound". Especially since I've created filters for quiet listening and normal listening. On the weekends, or working late, I tend to crank to realistic levels, but during the workday, things are pretty quiet. I have to mention the neat trick I read about in one of the earlier DIRAC reviews, where I constructed a filter specifically for quiet listening, where I basically set the target at -20db, so that the filter could handle the entire spectrum of EQ mods without strain. For playback, I raise back up to zero with the preamp volume knob, which is a stunning effect, especially with a boosted bass and treble, to account for my ear's lack of sensitivity at low volumes [google the articles if you want a more technical description about how filters only cut, they don't boost].
Now the summing-up conclusion: I've been an audio nut for close to 40 years, and I've spent a fortune chasing this speaker or that preamp hoping for that "not too subtle" difference that will be worth the upgrade. Only a few times can I remember a "real" difference worth writing about, and this is my first-ever writing on anything audio. Truth is, when you get to a front-end rig that's over $3k, all the differences in sound will be small to minute, unless your spending goes exponential. This is my personal experience, and now that I have middle-aged ears, I'm probably not hearing all the best stuff anyway. I can say without reservation, that DRC is absolutely an improvement--even at a ruler-flat setting. Again with the cliche--a veil really seems to lift away and the muddiness that you weren't even aware of transforms into realistic clarity. (not like placing dimes or pebbles on your speakers, or coloring your CD's green at the edges, but non-audio friends even notice the difference) If you start tweaking the filter curves, it should be theoretically possible to replicate your favorite colorations from yesteryear, (I'm seeing an aftermarket biz opportunity in selling classic Marantz tube curves, etc) but I'm done playing. I like the realism of this new PC audio so much, maybe I'll just leave it alone and enjoy the music, which I'm rediscovering again in a joyous manner.
Office system: Levinson 37, 380s & 360s feeding BelCanto (B&O ICE) digital amp into self modified Radio Shack speakers and powered Yamaha sub. Computer is home-built quad core i7 haswell with passive cooling, PCI-e drive containing op system and audio software powered by a Mojo Audio Joule 3 linear power supply and feeding SPDIF coax direct from motherboard socket to the 360s via illuminations D60 with JRiver Media software. I'm running all at 24/96k, which is the Levinson's upper limit. The DIRAC software is currently limited to 96k sampling, but I understand a 192 version is on the way. I think the DIRAC Live is an excellent product, and even at low volumes, its a game changer.
I've skipped over describing the many hours of learn-by-doing. configuring computer; JRiver software, calibrating microphones, setting listener calibrations (painfully loud) but in the end there's no regrets. Bottom line- you should try this software, it makes more a difference in listening experience than anything in recent memory.