Here's a quick blurb from the 950's manual (page 27) that might get you started.
Set the meter to Slow response and �C� weighting. Set it to the 70 or 80dB sensitivity scale. Position the meter at the approximate center of your listening area, at average ear height [approximately 40-46 inches (102-117 cm)] with its microphone positioned vertically (pointing at the ceiling). Don�t aim the microphone at the speakers, as this will produce inaccurate results.
Once that's all done, set your system volume to a reference listening level (on the 950, that's "00" dB, but other gear will vary -- you might use a test tone on the left or right channel and set the system volume to a point where you get ~75dB). Then run through the test tones and adjust each channel's trim to produce the same reading.
There are also a few threads floating around that look at meter use pretty closely, including a
lengthy debate on the merits of meters at all . (Upon briefly re-reading that thread, I had a flashback to my Experimental Techniques II lab in college, and a crazy professor who insisted that proper uncertainty analysis was foolish and that anyone could measure to within 1/64 of an inch with a ruler marked in divisions of 1/8th of an inch. He also swore that he could draw a "perfect" circle or straight line freehand. We were
so glad to see him retire.)
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