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Wireless measurement.
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<blockquote data-quote="Ivan Beaver" data-source="post: 47265" data-attributes="member: 30"><p>Re: Wireless measurement.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>What I would do (before I trusted it) would be to measure a loudspeaker with a corded mic and then with the wireless mic and see what the differences are.</p><p></p><p>Or better yet, run each mic into the dual FFT measurement system and look at what the differences are. It should be a flat line on both phase and magnitude. If it is not, you have to determine if the areas of difference are important or not to you and what you are trying to measure. In some cases it may be a big deal-other cases not so much.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ivan Beaver, post: 47265, member: 30"] Re: Wireless measurement. What I would do (before I trusted it) would be to measure a loudspeaker with a corded mic and then with the wireless mic and see what the differences are. Or better yet, run each mic into the dual FFT measurement system and look at what the differences are. It should be a flat line on both phase and magnitude. If it is not, you have to determine if the areas of difference are important or not to you and what you are trying to measure. In some cases it may be a big deal-other cases not so much. [/QUOTE]
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