Using The Bink Audio Test CD
Using The Bink Audio Test CD
Using The Bink Audio Test CD
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 Left-Right Left, Right, Center, Surround (like Dolby Pro-Logic) Dual Tone 700 L, 1k R 0dB 30s 700 0dB 30s 1k 0dB 60s Log Sweep 20 to 20k, 0dB to -6dB, 32s Linear Sweep 20 to 20k, 0dB to -6dB, 32s 80Hz warble +-40Hz -1dB 60s 100Hz warble +-40Hz -1dB 60s 120Hz warble +-40Hz -1dB 60s 16 -1dB 30s 20 -1dB 30s 25 -1dB 30s 31.5 -1dB 30s 40 -1dB 30s 50 -1dB 30s 60 -1dB 30s 63 -1dB 30s 70 -1dB 30s 80 -1dB 30s 90 -1dB 30s 100 -1dB 30s 125 -1dB 30s 160 -1dB 30s 200 -1dB 30s 250 -1dB 30s 315 -1dB 30s 400 -1dB 30s 500 -1dB 30s 630 -1dB 30s 800 -1dB 30s 1250 -1dB 30s 1600 -1dB 30s 2k -1dB 30s 2500 -1dB 30s 3150 -1dB 30s 4k -1dB 30s 5k -1dB 30s 6300 -1dB 30s 8k -1dB 30s 10k -1dB 30s 12500 -1dB 30s 16k -1dB 30s 20k -1dB 30s Piano A4 440Hz Piano solo, stereo Drum solo, stereo Digital Metronome 120bpm 4mins Crest Wave 10s DC Offset 10% Inverted Polarity 20s DC Offset Full!! Inverted Polarity 20s 1k Inverted Polarity 0dB 30s 1k -60dB 10s 1k Square -2dB 30s 1k Square 0dB!! 30s White Noise -9dB 60s 440 -1dB 20mins Pink Noise -12dB 20mins Digital Silence 2mins
Track 49: Crest Wave. This sound is a jarring mix of 100 Hz, 200, 300, 400 etc. tones continuing up the scale in 100 Hz steps to 1k, then in 500 Hz steps to 10k, then in 1kHz steps to 20k. Like white noise it can be used to set levels on gear not including speakers. Even though there is no DC offset, the energy of this complex wave touches the positive digital ceiling but only gets ~ 1/3rd of way down to the digital negative limit. Peak amplitude is 0dB. Average RMS power is -16.13 dB. This track can damage speakers if played too loudly. Tracks 50-51: DC Offset. These tracks look like flat lines on a graph; they are not sound waves at all. The Left channel is positive and the Right channel is negative. If added together and turned into mono they will cancel completely. If you pick just one channel these tracks are useful in discovering whether your amps can amplify DC or if they are sufficiently protected by high-pass filters. Track 51 is especially dangerous as it is full range -- the levels hit the digital ceiling and floor! The track ramps in from idle taking 2 seconds, lasts 20 seconds at full, then ramps back down to idle in 2 seconds. If you bypass all the HPF in your system and feed DC offset straight to your sub amps, you will usually see the drivers move outward if they are fed the Left channel and inward if they are fed the Right channel. Some systems are wired differently due to crossover characteristics... Certainly check to see if all the drivers are moving the same direction. Track 52: 1000 Hz Reversed Polarity. This track is helpful in determining whether your panning is perfectly centered. A centered pan pot combined with identical channel trims and fader levels will result in complete cancellation of this tone. Normal low-level distortion and hiss will let a wee bit of 1000 Hz through but in any case you can center your pan knob by noting the lowest level of audible 1k tone as you turn it. Track 53: 1000 Hz Very Low Level. This tone is buried 60 dB down from the digital ceiling and is usually heard amid system hiss. You can use it to check system linearity before your quieter gigs and on the feeds to recorders. Tracks 54-55: Square Waves. Watch out for these tracks! Turn your amps off first! Square waves are sometimes used in destructive testing at audio R&D labs... Don't run them at high volumes if at all. The most vulnerable part of your system are the HF drivers which can fry with square waves! These tracks are useful in setting CD input trims. If your channel input doesn't distort from Track 55 (which slams in at 3 dB above digital ceiling!), it won't distort from nearly any commercially available CD out there. You can also listen for crosstalk on other channels -- it comes through most severely with square waves in neighboring channels. It is not ever necessary to send square waves out to amps and speakers in a normal live sound setup situation. Track 56: White noise: This track has equal energy at every Hz. It can be used to calibrate levels of various pieces of gear not including speakers. It sounds much too bright for use as a main EQ setting tool and can damage HF drivers. This track has an average RMS power of -9.03 dB and a peak amplitude of -2.57 dB. Track 57: 440 Hz sine 20 minutes. You can use this tone and a cheap piezo tweeter to adjust the gain stages of all the pieces of gear up to but not including the crossover. Run the 440 into a mixer and out of a line level output into the piezo tweeter. Turn up the input trim and the faders until you hear distortion artifacts (mainly 1320 Hz and higher) start to become audible in the piezo. Back the trim down a bit: you've just determined the ceiling beyond which this piece of gear goes into distortion (despite what the red overload LEDs are reading.) Continue through your various devices, hooking the piezo up to each output under test, and listen for high-frequency artifacts coming out of the piezo, ignoring the red LEDs. Align all your gear to distort simultaneously and you will benefit from lower system hiss and greater total dynamic range. Warning: some CD players add a little too much harmonic distortion to their output. First thing to do is listen to your CD player's output straight into the piezo... Track 58: Pink noise 20 minutes. Double Mono - same signal on both Left and Right. This track allows you to set system EQ controls while using a high-quality omnidirectional test microphone and a software audio analyzer tool like SmaartLive, SIMM or SpectraFoo. Some experienced techs can EQ by ear with pink noise. You can also use pink with audio analysis programs to set delay times. And pink noise is helpful in setting bandpass levels on crossovers. This track has these power characteristics: Average RMS Power= -12.2dB. Max RMS Power= -8.77. Min RMS Power= -14.9dB. Peak Amplitude= -1.65dB Track 59: Silence. You can use this track (along with the commands Stop and Pause) to discover whether your CD player is adding small amounts of noise to your test tracks. Some cheaper CD players add a low-level, chirpy digital whine while playing which will make your test results less precise. Others have excessive harmonic distortion -- you might need to play a tone into a computer analysis tool or 440 Hz into a piezo tweeter to discover this fault.