SmarterNoise Pro 12+

Video recording sound analyzer

Johan Rogard

Designed for iPhone

    • 4.3 • 22 Ratings
    • Free
    • Offers In-App Purchases

iPhone Screenshots

Description

SmarterNoise Pro is the most advanced edition of the SmarterNoise recording sound level meters. SmarterNoise Pro edition is developed especially with more advanced measurements in mind, and includes many requested features such as a frequency spectrum display, export of measurement data, A-, C- or no weighting for sound level measurement, and full screen audio mode. SmarterNoise Pro edition does not contain any advertising, and performs accurately and fast.


Features:

• Sound level measurement in video mode

• Sound level measurement in audio mode

• Sound meter snapshot camera

• Record video and audio files (paid function)

• Recording timer

• Sound level activated audio recording

• Frequency spectrum display (paid function)

• Peak frequency detection

• A-, C- or no frequency weighting

• Export of measurement data in CSV format

• Full HD (paid function), HD and VGA video resolution

• Three video quality settings

• Archive for saved files

• Sharing of saved files

• Calibration

• Save location of measurement (optional)

• Time and date

• Continuous Leq, LAeq, LCeq value

• 10 second sound level average (Leq, LAeq, LCeq)

• 60 second sound level average (Leq, LAeq, LCeq)

• Maximum and minimum decibel level


About decibels and sound level measurement

The unit for measuring sound is called a decibel. Because the decibel scale is logarithmic, a sound with an intensity that is twice that of a reference sound corresponds to an increase of about 3 decibels. The reference point of 0 decibel is set at the intensity of the least perceptible sound, the threshold of hearing. On such a scale a 10-decibel sound is 10 times the intensity of the reference sound. Highlighting this is important as already a few decibels higher or lower makes a noticeable difference in how noise is perceived.

The preferred method to describe sound levels that vary over time, resulting in a single decibel value measuring the total sound energy over the period, is called Leq. It is however common practice to measure sound levels using A-weighting, which attenuates lower and higher frequencies that the average person cannot hear. In this case the value is called LAeq.

A- and C-weighting

The A-weighting is a standard, commonly used filter that attempts to alter the measured sound pressure levels to more closely match the perception of the human ear. A-weighting makes the sound level meter less sensitive to very high (over 8000 Hz) and low frequencies (below 1000 Hz).
C-weighting also attenuates low and high frequencies, but the attenuation of low frequencies is much less severe compared to A-weighting.

Calibrate:

Calibrate the application using the calibration tool found in the settings menu. Phones and their components vary in quality and setup so you need to calibrate the app in order for the results to be relatively comparable. One suggestion is that you close the window and door to your bedroom or bathroom, turn off appliances, and once its very quiet calibrate the app so the reading is about 30 decibel.

What’s New

Version 1.020

- The spectrogram range setting was removed. Instead, zoom the spectrogram by pinching and scroll by dragging. In camera mode, long clicking on the spectrogram enables you to interact with the spectrogram, instead of zooming the camera.
- You can now apply the selected weighting mode to the spectrum analyzer input.

Ratings and Reviews

4.3 out of 5
22 Ratings

22 Ratings

Ivan velo ,

Cool app

Great for checking to see if I’m out of tune

Developer Response ,

Thank you for the review and support

ShoobyTaylor ,

Great app ruined by incredibly inconvenient sharing feature

I don’t understand how they could’ve put this much work into making such a great app, and then made it virtually impossible to get the videos off your phone, by requiring you to export them one at a time through a sharing feature that requires multiple clicks per video. i’ve got about 50 videos saved and it’s a nightmare tried to get them off the phone. They could easily have implemented iTunes file sharing so it was possible to just download the videos from the app through iTunes, or save them to the camera roll, or you let you select a bunch of them and upload to dropbox or save to iCloud, and they didn’t bother to do any of that. It would’ve been a five star app if not for that, but 1-by-1 export via a clunky “Sharing“ interface is such a major hassle and such an obvious missing feature that I’m deducting two stars for it.

OCD Englishman ,

Tested at 55 and over community in South Texas

Wish it measured and documented inaudible part of the spectrum

App Privacy

The developer, Johan Rogard, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

Data Not Collected

The developer does not collect any data from this app.

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

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