RTA Pro Analyzer

by RadonSoft


Music & Audio

4.49 usd



Turn your Android phone into a professional audio analyser with up to 120 bands.


Professional version of the RTA audio analyser. Adds 1/4, 1/6 and 1/12 analysation band spacing with up to 120 bands, scalable peak holds and more colour schemes. Permanently stores calibration data. Screenshots can be saved and peak / rms values can be exported to a .csv file.If in doubt, check our free RTA .Bugs, comments to: [email protected] with Android 9 and 10, 64 bit support. Internal engine reworked for enhanced accuracy and sensitivity. Various small fixes for problems with calibration on some devices.

Read trusted reviews from application customers

Awesome idea for an app. But the interface just straight up sucks. Trying to tune with this is horrible, the free spectroid app is much easier to observe frequency changes. Please make this better.

Kyle Hazelton

The radon soft site no longer exists. So this software is what it is and it's not going anywhere else.

P. S.

Great app. Really wish someone would make possible to view 2 traces from 2 sources i.e front speaker and external inputted source via the trrs mic input. So you could measure the output of your console vs speaker reference like smaart.

Robert Duerscheidt

This is as PRO as my little pinky. There's no option to load up a calibration file and manual calibration is really bad... I had to refund this app after trying it out.

Aleksandr Panzin

Overall is good, but I want to try the calibration the of band . But How to calibrate for each number of band frequensy?

Benny Benyamin

Good

Jamsheer cherucode

Excellent app

Andrew Ford

Pro version cats miau. Amazing how much background noise there is. Trying to match curtains to filter out car noise.♡♡♡

Hans Wolfgang Schulze

Hmmmmmm tring to measure the peak noise level, when ever i press the start button i always get a sharp peak which is useless as soon as you start, the background noise was measuring about -70 dbfs but the peak at the start saw spiking at anything from between -50 & -8 yet there was no noise present, so it renders the peak level detection useless.

Mac McCarthy

Exactly what I wanted. :)

M H