Hmm... I think it could be interesting to see if the LFE channels on the affected mixes are all low-pass filtered, or full-range.
Or who mastered them.
If they're Low Pass Filtered that would add in a Group Delay, so that could be why one is seen,
Very approximately, the Delay, Td, in milliseconds (ms), where n is the filter order, and fc is the 3dB cut-off frequency in Hz of the filter.
Td = 125n/fc
Assuming a Butterworth filter, so maximally flat, a 100Hz cut-off frequency, and wanting to reduce the signal by at least 30dB at 500Hz, you would require a 3rd to 6th order Low Pass Filter.
For filter orders;
3rd: Td = 3.75ms
4th: Td = 5ms
5th: Td = 6.25ms
6th: Td = 7.5ms
Nice find,but isn't it a little funny that many of these discs are on top of the polls and nobody noticed any problems before?I have most of them and I haven't noticed any problems with bass sound on these.
Beck: Sea Change (BDA) waveform:
Issue1: L, R & LFE phase inverted with C, Ls & Rs
Issue 2: LFE not aligned
EDIT: After fixing this yesterday there was a huge boost in bass!
Isn't that the kicker? Some of the titles in question are rated extremely high.
@steelydave BBB is a great example of an album that sounds anemic on a full-range and bass-managed system. It's the phase inversion of main channels that kills the bass.
I've heard some of these LFE shifted albums on both types of systems and they don't disappoint the way the Sony BBB does.
It's only the FL & FR channels that are inverted, the LFE is correct - if you're inverting your LFE, that may explain why you were saying to me in PM that it was only a 2ms and not 8ms delay that was needed. It's definitely 8ms if you leave the phase of the LFE as-is.
Yeah, my main man. Don't nobody get me wrong. Stands to reason that LFE shift causes noticable differences for some listeners on some systems.Yes I agree with you, phase-inversion problems cause a 100% loss of the affected frequencies. The phase-inversion issues caused by the offset LFE aren't as total, but they are absolutely noticeable - the difference on my phase corellation meter between the original files and the corrected ones is about 50-75% out of phase to nearly 100% in phase, and my headphone listening tests back this up, the corrected files have an audible impact on the tightness and quality of the low-end extension.
Yeah, my main man. Don't nobody get me wrong. Stands to reason that LFE shift causes noticable differences for some listeners on some systems.
Would I gladly download corrected versions of all affected albums? Sure!
Though, because the sound is already satisfying for for me, and the visual experience is pretty intense, for albums like the corrected IA BD, I'll stick with that, mainly.
I looked at the two Beck titles first and completely confirm what was discovered here.
Except, the phase appears correct to me on the last track (Emergency Exit) of Guero.
I should have a new Channel Alignment tool added to Music Media Helper later today to enable easy fixing of affected albums. This will only support FLAC, WAV and DSF files.
Have mercy!!!Wow, I think you're right actually - visually Emergency Exit does look correct compared to all the other tracks. Will double check with the phase meter later to confirm.
Have mercy!!!
That'd be really good. Like a separate tab or something? To have an issue/fix HQ would be cool. I have some of the titles listed as -Maybe a specific area of the forum can be created, "Fix The Mix", including there all the finds done in the past about authoring problems.
One section for analog (which will be 99% Q8) with list of swapped channels etc;
One section for digital, which can include:
- the above issue of LFE phase invert and /or delay
- the messed channels configuration (example: TYA A space in time DVD, swap f/r)
- the "we tried to 5.1fied a quad mix but we did a dud" (example: Deep Purple Stormbringer dvd)
- other stuff (example: the l/r delay on the Sly&FS GH stereo track)
I mean, there's a wealth of information in this forum that is really precious; having a single point for collecting all this stuff will be important for the years to come, especially for the newcomers.
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