Lex Starwalker
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It's ok. I don't know how accurate it is, as I don't have a way to verify its readings. The graph function sounded really cool until I found out you can only see the last 60 seconds, which makes the graph useless. Also no way to save the graph that I can see. Also can't customize the appearance at all. So if you want to see dBs in real time, it works for that, but that's it. There are other free dB apps with more features.
4 people found this review helpful
Matthew Barr
I've been using this app with a calibrated USB mic to measure and balance sound levels from the various speakers in a home theater system. The graphical history is perfect for this, I can sample each speaker for 5 or 10 seconds and get a clear visual indication of their relative levels. It's been incredibly useful, I really appreciate it. It would be even more useful if it had an option for C weighted averaging, and the ability to control the horizontal and vertical display range.
77 people found this review helpful
Jeff Winter
Works perfectly. Idk why people are saying it doesn't measure sound while ads are displayed or that it's difficult to read at a glance. Not seeing either of those issues. Current reading is displayed simultaneously in digital and analog format as well as minimum, average, maximum and graphing for a session. And this is an extremely inexpensive app at $1.99 if you prefer ad-free. App development costs money. Small price to pay for this quality and stability.
188 people found this review helpful