Hello Adagio,
REW has a bit of a learning curve. There are quite a few videos online that can help. As suggested you want to zoom in so you can see more clearly where the ups/downs are. As you are adjusting the DSP for the bass unit I might suggest that you only look at the frequency range up to the or just past the crossover from the bass to the midrange unit (somewhere around 300 Hz is typical). A good frequency response would be +/- 5dB in the bass so if you can get the peaks and valleys to fit in that band then that is good. (1/24 smoothing is good to use in the bass)
There is a physics limitation on the waterfall plot. We can not see high resolution in both frequency and time. I would suggest 20Hz to 100Hz or 100Hz to 200Hz etc. Also, Ideally, you would have a 40dB drop in the first 300ms. I notice on the graphs you showed that it is displaying the noise floor. Set the Y-axis to 5dB over your max to 40 dB below your max. for example if your max SPL is 86 dB then select the max Y value of 90 dB and the min Y-value of 45 dB.
When adjusting the DSP on your fantastic speakers keep in mind that it can be used to reduce the peaks but DSP can not (typically) be used to raise the valleys.
~Todd
REW has a bit of a learning curve. There are quite a few videos online that can help. As suggested you want to zoom in so you can see more clearly where the ups/downs are. As you are adjusting the DSP for the bass unit I might suggest that you only look at the frequency range up to the or just past the crossover from the bass to the midrange unit (somewhere around 300 Hz is typical). A good frequency response would be +/- 5dB in the bass so if you can get the peaks and valleys to fit in that band then that is good. (1/24 smoothing is good to use in the bass)
There is a physics limitation on the waterfall plot. We can not see high resolution in both frequency and time. I would suggest 20Hz to 100Hz or 100Hz to 200Hz etc. Also, Ideally, you would have a 40dB drop in the first 300ms. I notice on the graphs you showed that it is displaying the noise floor. Set the Y-axis to 5dB over your max to 40 dB below your max. for example if your max SPL is 86 dB then select the max Y value of 90 dB and the min Y-value of 45 dB.
When adjusting the DSP on your fantastic speakers keep in mind that it can be used to reduce the peaks but DSP can not (typically) be used to raise the valleys.
~Todd