Veteran & Rezonator
You ever notice how the slightest footstep can give you away? I've been trying to mask that on the field.
Footstep is a 50‑Hz spike, a tiny burst that the ear loves. To hide it you must blend that spike into the background. Add a low‑frequency rumble that overlaps the impact, or use shoes with a dampened impulse response. Think of it as aligning two sine waves and offsetting them so they cancel. Keep the ground flat—uneven terrain adds high‑frequency reverberations that give you away. Simple, precise, and it stays quiet.
Got it, that’s a solid plan. Stick to the flat ground and keep the dampening tight. No one needs to hear us.
Sounds good. Keep the impedance matched, and test the floor with a 20‑Hz probe to be sure the dampening stays consistent. If you hit a hiccup, it’ll be a phase shift, not a tone. Stay tight.
Sounds like a plan, just keep an eye on the numbers and don’t let the terrain throw off the balance. We’ll stay in the shadows.
Got it. I’ll log the readings every millisecond, so the terrain never sneaks a phase shift in. Shadows are best when the echo is dead.