![]() That said if I were dealing with a normal tweeter with a more or less flat frequency response, I'd probably have gone passive and skipped the biamping because passive crossover designs that just cross things over are easy to find or make. That said, what I can report is that using ASIO4ALL did not produce satisfactory results for me.Īll speakers are potentially bi-ampable if you don't mind opening them up -) It's fairly easy to bypass a passive crossover if you're committed to the idea. I'll probably have to invest in a freestanding analog phantom power amp at some point that I can route into my Asus (as even the USB mics mentioned up thread would be separate audio devices in windows). I still don't have a soundcard with both phantom power and enough outputs to do convolution on my setup (I've been too busy trying to finish up some other things to worry about convolution just yet). To be fair, it may be my user error in some other part of my process that screwed everything up because I haven't been able to try it the "right" way yet. I tried to take measurements using ASIO4ALL to try and "bridge the gap" between the input external card and the internal output card and the resulting filters (when applied) made everything sound very, very odd when I got done (hollow sounding, tons of pre-echo, etc.). I have an M-Audio external card with phantom power for my mic, but I need at least five outputs for playback on my system, and my output card is internal (an Asus) and has no phantom power. My experience trying to use ASIO4ALL as a wraparound bridge when doing convolution testing was very poor. ![]()
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