The KA Electronics EEQ-12 Elliptic 
Equalizer for vinyl mastering is a unique 12 dB per octave design based on work published in the 
Pro Audio Design Forum. This listing is for the bare PC board.
What is an Elliptic Equalizer?
An "elliptic equalizer" is used during vinyl mastering to prevent playback 
skipping on music having wide stereo bass. The bass-to-mono elliptic EQ gets its name 
from the width of ellipses in the recorded groove or 
Lissajous patterns on an 
oscilloscope. If the width of the recorded groove becomes too narrow from stereo 
bass, which produces large "vertical modulation" of the cutter head, the 
playback stylus can be pinched out of the groove.
Elliptic EQ high-pass filters the difference, or "Side" information, to convert low frequency vertical 
modulation of the cutter head to lateral. Elliptic equalizers (EEQ) historically had 6 dB per 
octave filter slopes. When Side is high-pass filtered to provide EEQ, a low-pass 
response, also at 6 dB per octave, is created in the stereo crosstalk curve. 
When elliptic equalization is used to make low frequencies mono, midrange separation and stereo imaging are impaired at a 6 dB per octave rate. Due to their sonic footprint, EEQs are only used when necessary. The EEQ-12's 
improved separation 
changes that.
Steeper high-pass filters don't improve crosstalk.
A Side high-pass filter with a  slope greater than 6 dB per octave steepens the EEQ response, but the crosstalk curve, which is subtracted or "derived," will 
have a 6 dB per octave slope regardless of the high-pass filter's steepness. The Left and Right outputs also produce undesirable 
response peaking. The steeper the high-pass filter the greater the peaking.
The limitation of asymmetric slopes and response peaking in an EEQ with slopes greater than 6 dB per octave is similar to derived loudspeaker crossovers. The work of crossover 
designers Linkwitz, Self and others in solving these limitations in speaker systems have been applied to the EEQ-12.
Elliptic Equalization based on crossover design.
The KA Electronics EEQ-12 has 12 dB per octave slopes in both its
vertical and
crosstalk curves.
By borrowing techniques from crossover design, a phase-correcting network in the EEQ-12's Mid signal path compensates for the phase response of the Side filter. The result is a 
symmetrical, 12 dB per octave 
response in both the vertical high-pass and low-pass crosstalk curves. Midrange 
imaging is maintained with a low sonic footprint.
The EEQ-12's steeper 
high-pass response allows the EEQ frequency to often be set an octave lower and, when combined 
with a crosstalk curve an octave lower and falling twice as fast, midrange 
separation and imaging are doubly improved.
Compare the difference.
The following curves show the EEQ-12 switched between 6 and 12 dB per octave at 
300 Hz. At 1 kHz the EEQ-12 has about 35 dB separation versus only 20 dB for a 
conventional 6 dB per octave EEQ. A phono cartridge may have up to 30-35 dB of midband separation. The improvement in stereo imaging 
  on playback is significant.

  
Hear the difference.
The following sound file compares the EEQ-12's crosstalk at 12 dB per octave (0-0:12 seconds), 6 dB per octave 
(0:13-0:28) and 12 dB per octave (0:29-0:37). The EEQ-12 frequency is 150 Hz. 
One channel is driven. The opposite channel's output, containing desirable bass 
cross-feed and undesirable crosstalk, was recorded as a mono file. The midrange 
leakage heard in the 6 dB per octave example is the reduction in separation that 
occurs with conventional EEQ.
12 dB versus 6 dB per octave crosstalk comparison  (Mono, mp3.)
Other applications for the EEQ-12 Elliptic Equalizer.
Vinyl playback:
Elliptic equalization is ideal 
for warp reduction  during vinyl playback or transfer. Warp is primarily vertical. Due 
to playback and cutting limitations described earlier, vinyl recordings do not 
typically contain recorded vertical content at low frequencies. The EEQ-12 filters low 
frequency vertical warp without filtering the lateral mono bass. When compared 
to conventional Left/Right infrasonic high-pass filtering, the EEQ's cutoff 
frequency works octaves higher without audibility.
Headphones:
The "bass-to-mono" cross-feed of the EEQ-12 creates 
an "in head" low frequency focus for headphone listening. No amount of 
EQ can correct a wide, flabby-sounding, bottom end. Slightly "woolly" or 
"tubby" bass in recordings with  too wide a low end for 'phones tighten up 
to develop "point" and impact.
Monitoring:
You don't want stereo bass that's panned to the opposite end of the room. 
Bass-to-mono processing during mastering with the EEQ-12 limits ultra-wide hyped 
stereo bass detrimental to dance, club and other large venues. Bass-to-mono also 
assists small speakers by distributing low frequency content more evenly between 
drivers. The EEQ-12's low sonic footprint and increased separation are 
particularly important for formats not destined for vinyl release.
EEQ-12 Features:
The EEQ-32 Elliptic Equalizer internal 
Mid/Side "MS" filters and can be used with conventional Left and Right inputs or 
MS encoded material.  
For Left/Right sources, the EEQ-12 provides on-board Mid Side encoding. 
Fully-balanced THAT1246 ICs receive the Left and Right inputs. MS duties are 
performed by THAT1240 precision sum and difference amplifiers.
The EEQ-12 
can accept external unbalanced MS inputs to add EEQ functionality to the 
Precision MS Matrix. When the EEQ-12 is
inserted at point "F" the MS matrix's balanced inserts remain available for 
upstream Mid/Side processing. External MS requires only four ICs to be installed 
in the EEQ-12.
The EEQ-12's internal MS signals are decoded on-board to provide balanced 
Left/Right outputs, using THAT1646 OutSmarts® 
line drivers, or jumper-configured to provide direct unbalanced MS outputs 
for external decoding. 
The EEQ-12 can be configured for either relay or 
switch-based tuning. On-board relays select Off, 75, 150 and 300 Hz with a 
single-pole rotary switch or contact closure. (Other frequencies are available 
by changing resistors.)  A four pole multi-position rotary switch with external resistors 
may also be used to directly tune the EEQ-12. Relays provide a very 
cost-effective solution for modulation plus preview applications which require 
a costly eight pole switch.
The EEQ-12 can also be relay-switched from 
symmetrical 12/12 to 6/6 dB response to emulate conventional 6 dB per octave EEQ 
identical to the Neumann EE-70 or EE-77. 
An optional 12/6 "uncorrected" mode is also available for experimentation.
The EEQ-12 provides hard-wire relay bypass for external MS-encoded sources. When the 
internal MS matrix is used, relays provide comparative "soft" bypass. Full 
hard-wire bypass using Left/Right connections require an
insert switcher.
Current-limited LED tally outputs are provided for 
switch illumination of bypass and filter slope. The relay and LED supply is 
electrically-isolated from audio ground. An optional on-board relay voltage 
regulator permits the EEQ to be used with an unregulated or higher-voltage supply.
The EEQ-12 Elliptic Equalizer is sold as a bare PC board, a "kit" including 
semiconductors, or an assembled and fully-tested module.
A Mouser Electronics Project Manager 
bill-of-materials 
is available for DIY builds of the EEQ-12 Elliptic EQ.
Elliptic Equalizer EEQ-12 with 12dB/Octave Slopes for Mastering, Bare PC Board
- Brand: KA Electronics/Rockmore-Labs
 - Product Code: EEQ12-PCB
 - Availability: 2
 
- 
              
$69.95
 
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