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3 so, why not flat and without reflections – KRK ERGO User Manual

Page 6

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“The ideal response is flat and without reflections” is a statement

you’ll hear if you ask people what the perfect sound would be

for them. However, for various reasons, it is not ERGO’s goal to

do this. Instead, ERGO is focused on making the room sound

right, reflections and all.

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We are used to listening to music inside a room. Listening to

music outdoors is rarely satisfying as it is missing something:

bass and impact. In other words, what we define as the generic

in room bass enhancement sounds natural to us, which is

precisely why you shouldn’t compensate for this.

Secondly, listening to a speaker with a flat in room power

response sounds very bright. Measuring the direct on-axis

response will look flat, but at the listening position the sound will

roll off towards the high frequencies – due to distance,

directivity, off-axis listening, general high frequency absorption,

and reflections in the room.

Last of all, reflections are a big part of how we determine

directionality and ambience. That is if there are no reflections, a

lot of the 3 dimensional information would be lost. If you are

trying to simulate how something will sound in a given position

in a room, you need to simulate a minimum of 100,000

reflections – otherwise, it just doesn’t reflect what happens in the

real world. Therefore, the challenge is not to remove the room

and the reflections – but to work with them.

Speaker designers obviously have an idea of how a loudspeaker

should sound. ERGO strives to preserve the speaker’s identity, no

matter what kind of room you’re in or how the speaker is placed.

You bought your great KRK monitors (or some other monitors)

because you liked the way they sounded and we understand

that. That’s why ERGO does not make every audio system sound

the same. The tonal balance of your speakers will be kept intact

– but ERGO will match them to your room by compensating for

the room’s influence. Generally, room influence can be defined

as peaks and dips in the frequency response. Some can and

should be compensated for, others cannot and should not.

So now you see the challenge involved in creating a room

correction system that maintains the tonality of your system and

only compensates for problems that can be solved. ERGO can

correct for many of these issues and help your mixes to properly

translate to other listening environments.

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