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Looking for IR from apple equipment
Anybody made some Impulse Responses from apple laptops, iPhones and iPads speakers and cares to share?
Comments
I'm pretty sure I didn't but.... what do you mean with "Apple laptops and iPads speakers"?
Like IRs of, I dunno, like random sheez going out of the speakers and then recorded?
Or using internal speakers as Impulse source for later deconvolve?
Im looking for IR wav or aif files (already ready without the sweep/bang) that capture the sound of the internal speakers, so I can imprint the sound of the little speakers on any material.
Tell me this is for mastering purposes. Please.
@syrupcore
Not only but also
I love talking to you.
We always seam to get what the other is talking about.
We should built a thinktank.
I would do it myself
but I don't have a set of microphones
and my mac just died
(Push)
This depends on how one interprets it. It could imply the IR from within the cavern or space that the transducer is mounted in. Or if could imply the IR from the space that you the listener inhabit, while you're listening to the equipment. Or even, it could imply the space immediately outside of the equipment's transducer(s).
The first will give you the impulse response and resonance and frequency response of what it is like to be one of those speakers, mounted where it is designed to be. The second two options are more variable depending where you put the equipment.
The first might not be as silly as it sounds, but also might not be as useful as it sounds. If one were to capture the IR of a tiny transducer such as an in-ear headphone, one would also have to capture the in-ear part by being in an ear. However, if one were to capture the IR of for example a big beatbox or ghetto blaster, or a Microkorg S, that may reap results that resemble capturing a 'normal' (but small) space.
The science of stereo positioning perception also includes not only HRTF but HRIR - head related impulse response - which indeed involves the impulse response of the ear cavity and the ear lobes and the side of the face and cheek and the effect of the nose. But then, if you go too far, you get here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scanning_near-field_ultrasound_holography
It's not silly at all,
They do this with guitar amps all the time
So if it catches a little air from the room I think of it as a little extra ...
Sometimes I have stuff running over the internal speakers and it sounds really nice and when I plug in the good headphones it's a big disappointment...
So what I want is the shitty speakers over the good monitors,
This can be used for sound design purposes and to check how the master mix works on that equipment...
Stereo Wav in 44.1khz 48 kHz and 96 kHz of that would be really useful to have.
I thought if I have use cases for this some other nerd may already have done that so I wouldn't have to do it again...