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I did his "Golden Cuboid" design for my audio mancave when we built 6 years ago. The ancient Greeks called this shape the golden rectangle and would be in proportions of 5 to 8 (very close to his numbers). They did it because it looks good (not awkwardly tall or wide) but more importantly it cut down on the echos inside those stone (hard surface/no absorption) temples.If you play around with the numbers you'll find his numbers (similar to what others recommend) don't easily work in multiples of each other (like 3 times the width equals 2 times the length), thereby reducing echo in one direction (say along width of room) adding with the those in another direction (say along length of room). BTW shape is only 1 part of having a good room. Isolation (physical/electrical) is another. PM me.
Thanks, JLM.And in terms of electrical isolation - this new house will have 2-phase power in from the street, so 1 x 80a (240v) phase will be for the house and 1 x 80a phase will be dedicated to the music system. IE. 4 x 32a circuits:* 1 for digital sources (CD-R unit and Lingo PS for my LP12)* 1 for analogue sources (phono stage, preamp and FM tuner), and* 1 for each speaker active XO/power amps.Regards,Andy
You only have 80 amps for your entire house and 80 amps for your listening room? Is that correct? Are you using gas heat, gas hot water, gas stove/oven? What about air conditioning?
. . . a "golden trapagon", where both sides angle out slightly so that the width of the back wall is 15.72' (whereas the front wall is 12.36').I wish to understand how he arrives at 15.72, in relation to 12.36. The reason - we are designing a new house to live in and, like the one we've been in for 25 years, a "listening room" is part of the house specification. (Alas, quite a bit smaller than the room I have now. )Andy
. . . One of their main points is that "fixed" ratios like the "Golden Cuboid" (1:1.6:2.6) don't necessarily scale for different room volumes. And it doesn't come close to their "best" or "second best" values.
all one has to do is plug-in the dimensions of a golden-ratio rectangular room into any modal calculator (many free ones out there, or diy in Excel), and you'll see that it actually produces some duplicate resonances, more than many other ratios out there.
A very interesting article (http://www.acoustics.salford.ac.uk/acoustics_info/room_sizing/?content=index) about computer modeling for
Ethan, can you speak to any of the technical details of the article or paper cited (requires AES membership or purchase)?
I tend to think there probably are a set of ratios for cuboid rooms which are at least good starting points
AREA! :front wall 94.43 sfrear wall 152.484front/rear = 0.619These ratios aren't really as critical as Cardas makes it out to be, however. Many other intervening variables exist in the real world that change the effective geometry of the room. Given an existing cuboid room of the same volume to work with, I would probably stick with the shoebox, rather than sacrifice room volume. A front wall 7' x 12' or smaller is pushing-it, unless one is planning for only one or two good listening seats.Having said that, if I had the luxury of building a room entirely from scratch and wanted a moderately live room, I would choose some variation of taper. In addition to reducing echoes without absorption, etc, it also shifts the first reflection points (from sidewall and ceiling) rearward, possibly to a point behind the listener. The first floor reflection can be easily addressed several different ways (No, carpet ain't one of 'em). -- Mark
Also from Cardas Site: monopole speaker position in a Golden Cuboid room, according the Golden Rule.
Sadly, he doesn't give a similar suggestion for dipoles (Maggies)! Regards,Andy