V
VESmedic
Well-known member
Oh boy……
The goal of an FRFR is often to reproduce the sound of that particular cab mic'd up a certain way. In that case it just becomes a transfer function, which is certainly possible, and the mechanisms for which are completely understood.
If, on the other hand, your goal is to exactly mimic that particular cabinet in a room with you, I think @TheGreatGreen laid it out pretty well with a host of supporting evidences why it is unlikely to happen. I wouldn't go as far as to say it is impossible, but I wouldn't bet on the possibility either
Tell em BezoSame is true with pizza. You get more pizza by getting more smaller pizzas than you do with one big one.
And four 10in pizzas is 314in², which will feed way more than one 18in pizza.Tell em Bezo
18 inch Pizza = π(18/2)²
= 254in²
14 inch Pizza= π(14/2)²
=154in²
Two 12 inch Pizzas = 2π(12/2)²
= 226in²
Much like subwoofers… It must be an 18” to beat 2 of those 12s..
Now, while 2 medium pizzas often provide more total pizza surface area, the best choice depends on individual preferences & the specific deal offered by your pizza joint.
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That is my main guess also at the time of writing this.Often the answer to this like so many other recording questions about gear choice and technique is because "that's how everyone else does it and I'm afraid to think for myself". Luckily with micing a cabinet, the results are immediately audible, unlike magical or false claims about mic preamps and other faith based gear claims, so it may just be that its because that's the sound they like, regardless of what they claim they are after
I don't think it's that impossible. I'll explain:I wrote up a pretty big effort post in this thread the other day about this but decided not to post it because it seemed like the discussion had died down, but I can see it hasn't, so I'll try to rewrite some of it.
Look, it's great you're wondering about stuff. And you should always look for ways to improve things, whatever they are, guitar or otherwise. However, in this case, we've been trying to tell you something that you have been unwilling to hear, so I'll say it as clearly as I can...
In the digital modeling industry alone, the concept of developing some method for "making a monitor or PA speaker mimic the exact sound and behavior of X,Y, or Z guitar cab" is something that has been chased by everyone, including some of if not the smartest and most innovative people in the entire guitar gear industry for the better part of at least two decades at this point. Many of these people have vested financial interests in cracking that nut, lots of whom have effectively all the resources in the world to make it happen. And do you know what literally all of them have concluded?
What you are asking cannot be done. It is impossible.
Not "we don't know how to do it," not "we might be able to do it but it's too expensive and/or resource intensive," but "it is literally impossible to make a FRFR speaker enclosure sound like any specific guitar cab."
Why is it impossible? Well...
The answer is basically "physics." What do you actually hear when you hear a 4x12 cab in the room? Hearing "four speakers" is only part of it. Even if you eliminate room reflections, which are HUGELY influential to in-the-room-tone, in addition to the main four speakers, you are still also hearing the other 6 sides of the speaker cab all audibly vibrating and behaving as speakers themselves (and it's 7 total sides if you have an angled cab) in addition to the main 4 speaker surfaces. And make no mistake they absolutely vibrate loud enough to influence the sound in the room. That means for any given straight-baffle 4x12, all together there are a minimum of TEN (10) separate surfaces vibrating and emitting sound, each one with its own unique EQ signature, its own dynamics, its own phase relationship between itself, every other surface of the cab, and your ear.
There is quite literally no way to completely accurately capture and translate the full behavior of that kind of sound producing device to a given studio monitor or PA speaker, most of which have only one main driver plus a tweeter and are completely differently sized, differently built, differently internally dampened, and many of which are differently shaped as well. It's just physics. And EVEN IF you eliminate the sounds produced by the sides and backs of the cab and you're only dealing with four speakers floating in space, you still wouldn't be able to capture the identical experience of standing in front of those speakers and walking around them and translate that to another monitor, just due to the fact that the overall shape and configuration of those four cones are going to be entirely different from whatever monitors you'd use, which means the directionality and beaminess would be totally different because your exposure to a given amount of speaker surface area depending on where you stand would be different between a cab and a monitor.
We hear what you are asking. It’s not just a case of us idiots not being able to comprehend the unfathomable genius of your idea to “use a reference mic and put it a little farther away than normal and maybe use a 10 inch speaker.” It's physics, man. What you are asking simply cannot be done because of the fundamental differences between guitar cabs and FRFR cabs. The next best thing is then to capture a sound that will translate to FRFR speakers and make it as good as possible.
But whatever happens before or at/inside the guitar cab speaker element, doesn't matter, as it's the resulting audio itself which is being captured with that mic and then played back through the studio monitors. So whatever speaker element you might use, and even if you modified it in anyway, you would still capture the actual performance with the mic.To add to what @TheGreatGreen is saying the speakers are constructed differently, especially the magnets. That and guitar speakers interact with the 'load' coming from the Output Transformer and the Power Tubes. All 3 interact with each other. It is very dynamic. Where FR/FR speakers are well....flat.
You're idealistic but your sig line tells me you will eventually be more realistic once you accrue some time with this.But whatever happens before or at/inside the guitar cab speaker element, doesn't matter, as it's the resulting audio itself which is being captured with that mic and then played back through the studio monitors. So whatever speaker element you might use, and even if you modified it in anyway, you would still capture the actual performance with the mic.
Yeah it seems he’s saying the best way to capture the true essence of a 4x12 cab in the room is to use a 4x10 cab mic’d with a “flat” mic from multiple feet away.
Oh and he also only listens to music that sounds “different from all the rest” so you know he’s better than everybody else and also totally right about everything.
However, I have yet to hear him put his money where his mouth is and actually record anything that way himself and then post a single clip though. I hope he does because I can’t wait to be impressed beyond words at the sheer genius of his ideas that have eluded everyone else for decades, which will surely give us this magical “true whole sound of the speaker” that he thinks is uniquely desirable for some reason.
Imagine going to the trouble of all this and like 15k in mics and hundreds of hours of fooling around later you find yourself mic'ing your cab with a 57.![]()
Clips of what exactly?Honestly im open minded about most things recording, but for anything as wild and dumb sounding as the original post, ima need some clips.
Clips of what exactly?
Let me refer you to this answer of mine which explains the topic:A flat eq curve reference mic 3-4 feet away on a 10" speaker sounding like a 4-12 in the room.
Let me refer you to this answer of mine which explains the topic:
@skoora said in a different thread: "Don’t get ahead of yourself now. Still waiting for your speaker shoot out."
Let's move this to the right thread which is here, instead of you trolling around the forum.
Based on what you're suggesting, I can see you lack the capacity to understand the topic of this conversation. If you had understood it, you would not have made that comment. But since you did, I feel obligated to answer you so you might become a productive...
- Kraku
I assume you didn't read that explanation of mine yet.
That depends on what that method is and how the recorded signal compares to the sound that can be heard coming out of the guitar speaker. I.e. speaker output vs. studio monitor output differences.If as you say "Only what the guitar cab / studio monitor projects forward matters"
Then the standard way of micing cabinets everyone has been using for 50 years is by your own definition, the most efficient way.