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#1 |
Member
Mar 2009
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When I bought my Pioneer Elite AVR, oh about 7 -8 years ago, automatic setup and room correction systems were fairly new, and those who employed them had their own proprietary systems. These "auto-setup routines" were mostly panned in the AV press as "dubiously effective" to "I left it off".
When I bought my Pioneer, their MCACC system had been getting moderately better press, and I've been pretty happy with it. I am one of the folks who finds it works pretty well, and definatly makes music sound better. However, in the intervening years, Audessey came along and in a few short years became THE auto-setup and auto-EQ technology in the AV industry. If the AV press is to be taken at it's word, it is the ONLY one that "actually works". At least it is the only one that the AV press seems to actually USE and like the result. Audessey's big trump seems to be that their algorithm uses 3 - 8 measurement positions, where my unit with MCACC only does ONE. But I just read a review of Pioneer's new Elite AVR and the reviewer stated that MCACC "made everything good". This is the first reviewer I've seen who made positive statements about a non-Audessey auto-setup. So, my question is, has Pioneer updated it's MCACC to try to compete with Audessey, in that MCACC now also measures multiple seating locations, and does a good job of it? And what about Yamaha's YPAO? Who's got the best room-correcting auto EQ?? |
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#2 | ||
Moderator
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Quote:
Lastly, there is an excellent thread on MCACC over on AVS Forums. I can't attach it becuase I am at work and they block the site, but it goes very much in depth with the subject. Last edited by Fors*; 02-16-2010 at 03:36 PM. |
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#3 |
Member
Mar 2009
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Thanks, but that doesn't really answer my question. Just Pioneer marketing BS.
Then again, maybe it does answer the question. From that, it appears that MCACC still only measures one point in the room, and based on that, I'm guessing they HAVEN"T updated the algorithm. Anyone else wanna weigh-in? |
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#4 | |
Senior Member
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MCACC on the other hand isn't as complex. This has up sides and down sides. The down side is that is doesn't apply as many filters as Audessey and it isn't as effective for covering larger spaces. The up sides are it takes less processing power to run, leaving more headroom for HD audio decoding. Because it's simpler you can actually fine tune the results and save EQ profiles that can be toggled between. This is huge. All sound tracks are not the same, applying the same FIR filters to everything may be great for some things and crap for others. Even if Audessey does more, if it does it in the wrong way what does more really get you? With that said, I would like to clarify something. I think Audessey will be better for 90+% of the market. This is for 2 reasons. MCACC works much better in rooms that have been properly designed for acoustics. If you have taken the necessary steps to improve the acoustics prior to EQ, then MCACC in my opinion is the better option. However, most people don't dampen, position their speakers poorly and have a poor understanding of equalization. Audessey is better for the average person who isn't an expert in acoustics or many not understand EQ's. Most people don't know that room acoustics accounts for over 50% of what you hear and focusing more on acoustics for correction rather then exclusively equalization will produce infinitely better results. There are more complex versions of Audessey, external FIR EQ's that allow for calibration. Given an option I'd love to have a full Audessey EQ, but they cost an arm and a leg and are much harder for the average person to setup, so I'm leaving them out of the comparison. Last edited by kareface; 02-16-2010 at 04:46 PM. |
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#5 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I have used versions of Yamaha's YPAO calibration system for a few years now, and I really find it to be very useful for room calibration. With YPAO you can run the auto setup feature, then manually adjust or fine tune any aspect of it. So I'll typically run YPAO, letting it setup speaker distances, size, LFE cutoff, etc., and then I will fine tune those settings with my SPL meter.
I've been really pleased with the results. The drawback with Audyssey is that since it's 3rd party and licensed to manufacturers, the extent to which each receiver allows you to modify the settings can be limited. |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Audessey & sub | Subwoofers | bmwone | 26 | 03-06-2010 11:50 PM |
YPAO Speaker Phase | Receivers | SoundFreak | 5 | 09-07-2009 09:21 PM |
YPAO mic | Home Theater General Discussion | nothing.sound | 2 | 10-20-2008 02:39 PM |
unable to complete Audessey Calibration | Receivers | perjim1957 | 25 | 08-12-2008 09:20 PM |
Using Audessey MultEQ XT for Onkyo 705 | Audio Theory and Discussion | davelistro | 1 | 04-23-2008 05:33 PM |
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