With the flat setting it sounds sort of confused like it is trying to do everything at once, maybe beneficial if you want to take out some frequencies for a more rounded sound. But I think that most consumer speaker systems and headphones do add bass so maybe the stock sounds makes sense for mixing since you wouldn't overdo it. But I really have zero music production knowledge so I wouldn't know how you would end up with the spirit Pro. I think you would end up EQ'ing a mix a few db more on the flat preset to make it exciting than stock. I don't have access to a studio or monitor studio speakers but I would assume that they have more body thann the flat correction on FSP. I don't know what the goal of this is but if it is to represent studio monitors I think stock is better than with the flat correction applied. With the flat correction it sounds n shaped and rather busy. If you listen to the flat preset over a couple of songs and then bypass back to stock the sound appears cavernous, as if the bass hovers above and around, the vocals get more detail, fuller and are more upfront in stock.
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