0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Here's a couple of my sound installs in kitbashed N scale switchers. If you think these sound good with only 8x12 speakers, you should hear my road units....
That said, to me a low heart pounding rumble coming from an N scale loco would sound out of place and, well, ridiculous.
GTFO with those. Seriously, absolutely incredible stuff.
I've spent nearly 40 years on locomotives. I can tell when an engine is loading or not, I can hear defects in the engine. After 40 years I have no desire to take the noise home with me. On the first example of the SW1500, the sound file is wrong, I assume it's from a GP-38-2. The SW1500 doesn't have twin starting motors, it has generator starting like the SW1200. Oh, and remember the sw1200 has a normal top RPM of 835 and the SW1500 is a 900 RPM machine. The sounds will never be right for me....Randy
Thanks, Ed! Actually, I have since changed the sound file in both the SW1500 and SW1200 from what is heard in the videos. The file for the SW1500 that is heard in the first video is S0828, which ESU says was recorded from an MP15AC. I have since changed it to file S0733, which ESU says was recorded from an SW1500. The SW1200 originally had file 75871 as in the video, which was apparently recorded from an SW-8. It has since been changed to file 73860, which was recorded from an SW1200 per ESU.
Let's face the facts: no amount of equalization will allow the puny sub-inch size speaker (even with a large enclosure) to produce a satisfying low-frequency rumble of a Diesel engine, or the lower frequencies of a steam loco's chuff. That tiny speaker diaphragm is just incapable of moving enough air for that. There is no substitution for size. N scale loco will never produce sound that a G scale loco can with a 4" long-throw full range speaker.But other higher frequency sounds like horns, whistles, or bells work really well in N scale.
What is 'satisfying' is subjective and unprovable.What is provable and objective is that EQing of source files isn't being fully utilized.