Abstract Wide-band signals are potentially available in the measurement of transducers, which can obtain wide-band responses of electroacoustic parameters of them directly. The hydrophone of B&K 8103 is calibrated in a Φ 1.2 m×1.8 m small water vessel by wide-band signal processing technology in the frequency range of 3.15 kHz to 100 kHz. A thin pellicle co-vibrates with acoustic particle in the free-field, and its oscillation can be detected by a laser Doppler vibrometer, which can estimate the acoustic pressure distribution. The transfer function model is established in a small water vessel, and the wide-band frequency responses of the transfer impedance of transducer and hydrophone as well as the transfer impedance of transducer and pellicle in the small water vessel are calculated respectively. The wide-band signal processing technology of frequency domain filter process are used, which can isolate the reflecting acoustic wave from the boundaries and the surface of the water vessel. To verify the accuracy of the wide-band calibration measurements, the calibration results are compared with that using tone-burst signals in the water vessel and using free-field reciprocity method in the large water tank. The comparisons show that their calibration results are in a good agreement with each other, and the maximum deviation is 0.7 dB. All these demonstrate that the wide-band signal processing technology described is accurate and stable.