Tried doing nearfield measurements of midrange and woofer, since it will be nice to have at least some idea how they behave in the lower regions. I thought this data may help me do a crossover at 150Hz or thereabouts more intelligently.
So, I took multiple readings of each driver and this is what I got. This is the midrange graphs:
And this is what I got for the woofer:
All these graphs have been smoothed 1/16 octave. I know that for room correction, people seem to use 1/3-octave or 1/4-octave smoothing. But I am trying to keep the smoothing to a minimum to get a feel of the data -- I don't know what is 'right" for low-frequency crossover design. Never done a 3-way before.
Are these graphs supposed to have so much spikes and troughs?
So, I took multiple readings of each driver and this is what I got. This is the midrange graphs:

And this is what I got for the woofer:

All these graphs have been smoothed 1/16 octave. I know that for room correction, people seem to use 1/3-octave or 1/4-octave smoothing. But I am trying to keep the smoothing to a minimum to get a feel of the data -- I don't know what is 'right" for low-frequency crossover design. Never done a 3-way before.
Are these graphs supposed to have so much spikes and troughs?