How to Measure Speaker Frequency Response

6 steps15-20 min readUpdated 2026-03-20

Quick Answer

Measuring speaker frequency response means capturing the sound pressure level output across the audible frequency range relative to a constant input signal. The resulting curve reveals how accurately the speaker reproduces audio content, exposing peaks, dips, and rolloff that affect tonal balance and sound quality.

Try It Now

Open Transfer Function Measurement — free, no download required.

Open Tool

Equipment Needed

  • Measurement microphone with known frequency response
  • Audio interface with at least two channels (mic input and reference)
  • SonaVyx Transfer Function tool
  • Speaker and amplifier under test
  • Measurement stand or tripod at consistent height

Step-by-Step Guide

1

Prepare the Measurement Environment

Ideally, measure outdoors on a ground plane or in a large room where reflections arrive at least 10 milliseconds after the direct sound. If measuring indoors, place the microphone close enough that the direct sound dominates over room reflections. A typical compromise is 1 meter from the speaker, which corresponds to standard sensitivity specifications. SonaVyx's gated measurement feature can window out reflections for indoor measurements down to approximately 200 Hz, depending on the gate length.

2

Set Up Dual-Channel Measurement

Connect the signal generator output as the reference channel and the microphone as the measurement channel. In SonaVyx, open the Transfer Function mode which automatically configures dual-channel operation. The reference signal ensures your measurement shows only the speaker's response, not the spectral shape of the test signal. Without a reference, your measurement is an RTA display that conflates the source spectrum with the speaker response.

3

Configure Test Signal

Use pink noise for real-time analysis or a logarithmic swept sine for higher resolution results. Pink noise provides equal energy per octave and delivers immediate results with transfer function averaging. Swept sine gives the cleanest impulse response and highest dynamic range, typically 20 to 30 dB better than pink noise, but requires a quiet environment during the sweep. Set the level so the speaker operates at a normal listening level, typically 80 to 90 dB SPL at the measurement position.

4

Capture On-Axis Response

Position the microphone directly on the acoustic axis of the speaker, typically aligned with the midpoint between the high-frequency driver and the woofer. Start the transfer function measurement and allow at least 16 averages for stable results with pink noise. The resulting magnitude curve shows the on-axis frequency response. Look for the overall bandwidth, any peaks or dips greater than 3 dB, the crossover region behavior, and high-frequency rolloff.

5

Measure Off-Axis Response

Move the microphone 15, 30, 45, and 60 degrees off axis horizontally and vertically while keeping the same distance. Store each trace in SonaVyx's trace memory with descriptive labels. The off-axis response reveals the speaker's coverage pattern and directivity. Well-designed speakers maintain similar response shape off-axis with gradually decreasing level. Abrupt narrowing or lobing at specific frequencies indicates crossover problems or interference between drivers.

6

Evaluate Sensitivity and Bandwidth

Speaker sensitivity is the SPL output at 1 meter with 1 watt input (or 2.83V for 8-ohm speakers). Read the average SPL from 200 Hz to 4 kHz on the measured curve. The usable bandwidth is defined by the -10 dB points relative to the sensitivity level. Typical specifications include frequency range (e.g., 55 Hz to 18 kHz at -10 dB), sensitivity (e.g., 96 dB), and maximum SPL. Compare your measurements against the manufacturer's published specifications.

Interpreting Frequency Response Data

A frequency response graph plots sound pressure level (vertical axis, in dB) against frequency (horizontal axis, typically logarithmic from 20 Hz to 20 kHz). A perfectly flat line would mean the speaker reproduces all frequencies at equal level, but no real speaker achieves this. Understanding what deviations mean and which ones matter helps you make informed decisions about speaker selection and system tuning.

Smoothing and Resolution

Raw high-resolution frequency response data contains hundreds of narrow peaks and dips caused by room reflections, diffraction, and measurement noise. Applying smoothing (1/3 octave, 1/6 octave, or 1/12 octave) reveals the underlying trend while hiding details that may or may not be audible. For speaker evaluation, 1/6 octave smoothing is a good compromise. For system tuning decisions, 1/3 octave smoothing aligns with how the ear perceives tonal balance. Always note the smoothing applied when sharing measurements.

Free-Field vs Half-Space

Manufacturers may specify response in free-field (4-pi, full space), half-space (2-pi, on a boundary), or quarter-space conditions. A speaker that measures flat in free-field will show a 6 dB boost below its transition frequency when placed against a wall (half-space). Understanding the measurement conditions is essential for comparing specifications. Most live sound systems operate in somewhere between free-field and half-space loading, depending on rigging height and proximity to boundaries.

Phase Response and Group Delay

While magnitude response gets the most attention, phase response determines the speaker's time-domain behavior. Linear phase (constant group delay) means all frequencies arrive at the listener simultaneously. Nonlinear phase, particularly around crossover frequencies, causes temporal smearing that degrades transient clarity. Group delay is the derivative of phase with respect to frequency. SonaVyx displays both phase response and group delay alongside the magnitude curve.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Measuring in a small reflective room without gating, which shows room modes rather than the speaker's true response

Using RTA mode instead of transfer function, which confounds the test signal spectrum with the speaker response

Comparing on-axis measurements to manufacturer specs taken under different conditions (half-space vs free-field)

Applying too much smoothing which hides real problems, or too little which shows meaningless detail

Ignoring phase response, which affects crossover integration and overall system coherence

Applicable Standards

StandardClauseRelevance
IEC 60268-5:2003Clause 17Frequency response measurement method for loudspeakers
AES-2id:2023Clause 3Recommended practice for measuring room impulse responses
IEC 60268-21:2018Clause 5Acoustical output of loudspeakers for measurement conditions

Try It Now

Open Transfer Function Measurement — free in your browser.

Open Tool

Related Guides

Design-Time Companion

Need to design room acoustics before measuring? AcousPlan handles room acoustic design, while SonaVyx handles deploy-time measurement and tuning.

Frequently Asked Questions