Question about adjusting the balance


I'll start out making my question to the point:

which would be better to use to adjust the balance using a sound level meter, a 315 HZ tone or a "uncorrelated (stereo) pink noise 20 Hz to 20 kHz" test tone?

Now I will add the confusion:  I placed my meter about where my head is when I am listening and checked it with the 315 Hz tone and it was WAY off.  So I adjusted by turning the input level knob (Cary SLP05) way down on the strong side.  Then I measured with the 20 Hz to 20 kHz tone and to get an even reading on both sides I had to turn the side I had adjusted way down back quite a ways back up.

Which do I trust if I don't trust my ears?

That is the uncomplicated the version of the question.  To post the full story, the 315 Hz test tone came from a CD that said to use it with an AC voltmeter to test the AC volts at the terminals (I used the speaker terminals) and one side was about 0.2 VAC stronger (if I remember correctly) so I adjusted the strong side down.  (Also I will note that I checked and the voltage imbalance follows the balanced input 6sn7  tubes, and I do actually have tubes that check dead nuts even, but I was playing with some different pairs.)  So no biggy, right?  Now I have the input knob for the strong side turned a bit lower and I put a small piece of making tape by the knob and made a dot with a sharpy so I could remember where I set it in case I moved it.)

BUT:  now I get the idea to test it with the sound level meter, so I position the the meter where my head would be and use the 315 Hz test tone and now the strong side reads EVEN STRONGER!  I am not trusting my ears so I continue to adust the strong side knob down 'til it is pretty far down but both sides read about even on the sound level meter.  BUT then I find a test CD with the "uncorrelated (stereo) pink noise 20 Hz to 20 kHz" test tone and the strong side is NOT nearly as strong!  So I adjust it to get it as close to even as I can using the "uncorrelated (stereo) pink noise 20 Hz to 20 kHz" test tone

and

it turns out it is about BACK WHERE I HAD IT  after I adjusted it using my AC vm at the speaker terminals.

I guess I should add that this is a VERY nearfield environment with my tweeters, and ears (so therefore my sound level meter) making a pretty much eqilateral triangle of 50 some inches and it is a "dirty" untreated room which I can definitely see having a bad effect on the balance on the sound level meter after I had adjusted it using the AC vm, but why would I get  db readings that were inconsistent (balance wise) with the different tones?  I mean if the balance was off--fine, I can understand that and adjust for it on the meter, but I guess my question is why does it show way far off with one tone and not as far off with the other tone--if that question makes sense.

Thanks.

immatthewj

So what you data is telling you, as you described it above.  Is that you have a probem with either one of your highs or one of your mids.  My first thought was that it would likely be a driver or a crossover component in your speakers.  

Ahhhh, thanks, @carlsbad2  , that would make sense. 

but you said the voltage discrepancies followed the tubes.  Does the discrepancy at different frequencies follow the tubes?

I didn't actually go that far.  I do have a couple of pairs of 6sn7s that meausre almost dead nuts even, so I could spend some time and what the sound level meter said with them in there at the two different frequencies.

I know my question was probably confusing, although I tyed to spell it out as best I could, but what I did first was to use the AC vm to adjust the "input level" knobs until I was reading equal AC volts at the speaker terminals (with the 315 Hz tone).  It was then that I had the bright idea to see what the actual speaker output at my listening position, from each spaker, was.

Thanks.

 

@carlsbad2 , sincere thanks for your input. I did not play with different input tubes, but I do actually have a HT center channl version of the 805 Matrix that I have not used for years, so, even though I figured it was a fool’s errand, and therefore I was the right man for the job, I did play musical tweeters (actually with both speakers). To not make a short story long, I am pretty sure my wacky readings with 315 Hz were due to operator error.

I discovered that the readings with 315 kHz would change, for example, depending on where I was standing when I was trying to read the meter, and even depending upon where my head was when I was trying to read the meter. I won’t go on & on about how I tryed and failed to establish a reference point for myself and the meter at 315 Hz, but I did discover that the meter was way more stable (less subject to fluctuations due to my own positioning) at 20Hz to 20kHz and with the "input level" knob adjusted to compensate for the weaker preamp balanced input tube AC voltage at the speaker terminal, using pretty stable readings with the 20Hz to 20 kHz tone, the speakers had basically  the same readings from my listening position.  Meaning, that with the "input level" knob adjusted down (on the side I have the stronger tube on) to achieve equal AC voltage at the speaker terminals of both speakers, I also got nearly equal readings with the sound level meter.

So, much to do about nothing, but thank you for your input.

Going back to the untreated room - different tones reflect and build up in a room differently due to different wave lengths. Could it be that lower tones are being reflected and build up on one side or the other while higher tones are being absorbed? If room treatment is the issue, the fact that it changes depending on the frequency would be expected.  
 

I would find a couple different mono recordings, with a mix of highs and lows, play them and adjust until the image is centered. Howlin Wolf on one side of the spectrum and Peggy Lee w/ Goodman on the other should do the trick. 

@zazouswing  , thank you for your input and I believe that you are correct.  I also think that I was woried about nothing . . . I have a solid center image and I guess that is all I should have really been concerned about.  I don't know what led me down the sound level meter rabbit hole . . . there is no accounting for the stuff I sometimes get obsessed with.