panny
If you don't want to drag the sub outside which means feeding it with a signal and controlling the PC somehow:
I'd lower the volume to the sub drastically. By at least 20dB and try again. Turn off all your speakers to avoid confusion.
Go to the BFD linked page for tones and load tones into your computer. Use only round figures 10 Hz apart starting at 120Hz going down to 20Hz or 10Hz. The tone files should end up in your "My Music" folder where you can click on each file easily to play the tones at will.
Set the volume to your sub so you start at 70dB on the meter (C-Slow) at 120Hz. Then don't touch the volume again until you've finished testing. Now work downwards from 120Hz recording your measurements off the SPL meter.
Move the sub a good couple of feet and try again. It doesn't matter exactly where you put the sub because it's just temporary for the trial.
It shouldn't take long if you start with the fixed frequncies you're going to use written down the left side of a bit of lined paper.
Mark the paper out in vertical columns so you can enter the reading off the meter one column per trial. With each new trial and sub movement just use a new column.
Using well spaced frequencies will save you time. 120,110,100, 90 etc down to 20. You aren't trying to get a perfect graph you're looking for a 'family trend' in the figures off the meter.
Your present graph may be right on the edge of maximum output. It may be effected as a result of your very high testing level. It must have been deafening!
I found 70-80dB bad enough while testing. I stuck my meter on a camera tripod and placed it at the listening position on its side (using the pan and tilt head and screw hole on the back of the meter). So I could read it from a distance. You could lay yours on its side on top of something stable where it won't fall off if you don't have a camera tripod.
To start with I was running back and forth to read the meter and then back to set off a new tone on the computer. So being lazy I just made a playlist of fixed falling tones. Then I could just sit between meter and computer and record off the meter and read the frequency off the computer screen as each tone was played automatically.
It should be easy to see if the peaky trend is repeated regardless of room position by looking across your columns to see how the figures vary after 4-5 runs of recording the meter readings.
All this probably takes longer to describe than to do in reality.
Nimby
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