Openai/6942bda8-3500-8009-863c-4337a422fc34
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-2[edit | edit source]
User: what determines if BW stands for band width or butterworth in a EQ filter[edit | edit source]
what determines if BW stands for band width or butterworth in a EQ filter
Assistant: In EQ filters, BW can legitimately mean two different things, and what it stands for is determined by context: the type…[edit | edit source]
In EQ filters, BW can legitimately mean two different things, and what it stands for is determined by context: the type of filter being described and how the control behaves.
1. BW = Bandwidth[edit | edit source]
Most common in parametric EQs
What it means[edit | edit source]
Bandwidth describes how wide the affected frequency range is around the center frequency.
- Measured in octaves (e.g., 1.0 oct, 0.5 oct)
- Inversely related to Q - Wide BW = low Q - Narrow BW = high Q
How you can tell it’s Bandwidth[edit | edit source]
BW means Bandwidth when:
- The EQ is a bell / peaking filter
- You see controls like: - Freq / Gain / BW - or Freq / Gain / Q
- Changing BW makes the curve wider or narrower symmetrically
Example[edit | edit source]
- BW = 1.0 octave
- The EQ affects frequencies one octave wide centered on the selected frequency.
2. BW = Butterworth[edit | edit source]
Common in crossovers, HPF/LPF, and system processing
What it means[edit | edit source]
Butterworth refers to a filter alignment / response shape, not width.
Butterworth filters are:
- Maximally flat in the passband
- Smooth with no ripple
- Have a predictable phase response
- –3 dB at the cutoff frequency
How you can tell it’s Butterworth[edit | edit source]
BW means Butterworth when:
- The filter type is HPF or LPF
- You see options like: - BW, LR, BES, Cheby
- The slope is specified: - 12 dB/oct BW - 24 dB/oct BW
Example[edit | edit source]
- 24 dB/oct BW
- This is a 4th-order Butterworth low-pass or high-pass filter.
3. How to tell which one it is (quick rule)[edit | edit source]
Ask these three questions:
| Question | If YES → | | ------------------------------------ | --------------------------------------- | | Is it a bell/peaking EQ? | BW = Bandwidth | | Is it HPF / LPF / crossover? | BW = Butterworth | | Does it change width or slope/shape? | Width = Bandwidth / Shape = Butterworth |
4. Digital mixer reality (like Behringer WING)[edit | edit source]
On mixers like the Behringer WING:
- Channel PEQ - BW = Bandwidth (bell filters)
- High-pass / Low-pass - Filter type is typically fixed (often Butterworth-style internally) - You usually don’t see “BW” labeled here unless choosing alignment
So if you see BW next to a bell EQ, it is Bandwidth, not Butterworth.
5. One-sentence takeaway[edit | edit source]
- BW means Bandwidth when adjusting how wide an EQ bell is, and Butterworth when describing the response type of a high-pass or low-pass filter.
If you want, I can:
- Map this specifically to every EQ section on the WING
- Show BW vs Q mathematically
- Or provide training-course-ready wording for danatucker.com
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "BW meaning in EQ filters". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-12-17.