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Dave, excellent detail on your layout but you forgot to add the light switches Where did you get the idea to use the roofing panels? Did you add absorption behind these panels?
I would have thought that any reflections off the rear wall in your situation would not muddy the sounds as the difference in the time of arrival at your ear of the sound direct from your speakers and the reflections from the rear wall would not be large enough (there needs to be a gap of greater then 30 milliseconds for our brain to distinguish echoes from direct sound, and it is thought that for a gap of 20ms - the equivalant of 22 feet - or less, the sounds would only add volume).Hipper: something doesn't sound right about your numbers. early reflections off of the side wall add a bunch of mud to the sound, and that path is only a few feet longer than the direct sound. Once i made the listener side very dead it became apparent that the reflections off of the far walls, front & sides, were clearly audible and needed attention. I used foam initially, which worked great, but back to the dull room. So that's when i started looking for cheap ways to diffuse/scatter those paths. Hence the roofing panels, which work fine, once you get the correct bow established.Regarding redundant panels, I'm actually going the opposite way, building more QRD's to replace the roofing panels, and adding more to the listener side wall.Dave
I would have thought that any reflections off the rear wall in your situation would not muddy the sounds as the difference in the time of arrival at your ear of the sound direct from your speakers and the reflections from the rear wall would not be large enough (there needs to be a gap of greater then 30 milliseconds for our brain to distinguish echoes from direct sound, and it is thought that for a gap of 20ms - the equivalant of 22 feet - or less, the sounds would only add volume).Looking at your plan it seems to me that some of the panels and foam are not nescessary. What, for example, do the scatter panels behind the speakers do? The acoustic foam where the CD panels are and the QRDs on the side walls seems to be duplication although I appreciate they may help with controlling some frequencies.
Very interesting set up. Any chance we could get a picture of the scatter panels and more info on the material used for them?
What I do know is that you are going about this the right way. Start with what the experts say but then tinker with things until it sounds good for you.My understanding is that the panel drivers on our speakers have a spread of 30 degrees, but I would guess that means there are still weaker sounds beyond that otherwise there would be no first side wall reflections in mine or your walls.I'm impressed that you get a soundstage 21 feet away. I wonder how that comes about?
Interesting layout, experimentation can be fun!How tall are the cd racks? That seems visually odd to have something between you and the speakers like that, but if it sounds good... it usually is!
Do you use old or new style CDWG's, or none at all?
I don't understand wedging the listening chair between the foam standsI think I get the conceptit may take too much ambience out (go to any live performance)also have you considered placing your speakers on the long wallyou seem to be using half your roomwhen you could utilize the width to effectively remove a lot of the sidewall effectand have more access to your laundry room
I have a 15 by 27 room where I'm along the long wallI really like the sound with realtraps absorption and diffusionthe layout of the room doesn't work any other waythanks for the explanation Roc
Let me start by saying i have a rather large (14x23x8) dedicated listening roomDave
Then one day (2 yrs ago) i read about the "back against the wall" (BAW) setup and decided to give it a go. Heads Up: With this setup the listening position and speaker positions are CRITICAL, and the back wall allows new early reflection paths that muddy the sound.
IMO, Dave, 23' x 14' is not "large" ... although I guess it depends whereabouts in the world you reside. In England, I could imagine it might be considered "large". In Oz, my 27' x 17' is "medium" ... but my mate's 40' x 30' room truly is "large"! I can see from your diagram what "BAW" means. But why did you decide to position your speakers so far off the front wall?AIUI, 1/3rd into the room is the optimum for bass response (if you have the space) but you seem to be more than half way into the room?