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Have you ever tried a near-field setup? If this were my room I'd have the speakers 3-4 feet apart, very close to the front wall at the top of the drawing, and I'd sit 3-4 feet away. That will likely give you the largest sound field available in that room, short of lining all the walls with diffusers. It's at least something to try when you have a spare half hour.--Ethan
Book shelves may be better then a flat wall but it is not really going to diffuse the sound.
I'm not sure I understand this statement. Assuming that the books are many different sizes, I understand that there will be some absorption, but the shelves and rear wall will only reflect. So you have reflective surfaces (some with a little absorption) of many sizes and depths; isn't that a diffusor?
In placing my first reflection point panels, I have found that there are some differences for placement depending on method. I first placed my panels using the mirror method. I wanted to double check them so I used the calculation from your website.
How far off the front wall would you suggest? The problem I see is that I would be very close to my rack. My other concern is the sub placement since it is an OB and siting directly to the side of it is not ideal.
(1) Any time you are very close to a boundary you will hear reflections, even with acoustic foam.I'm surprised the sound is "clear". I'd predict it would be a bit muddy.A listening position too close to rear wall can cause the bass to get boomy. (2) Speakers too far away from listening position and you might get a bass echo.
C-J,I'm amazed that you can have good focus and clarity without acoustic treatments. Is your room extremely wide perhaps ?Dave
My ears are about 24" from the back wall without boomy bass, but at 20" I start hearing it. When you get it just right the bass is full and extended.
I got your PM, so I'll gladly comment. The problem with having a reflecting wall very close behind you is the severe bass nulls. But the response really is pretty bad in front of a wall, even if the particular combination of peaks and nulls sounds pleasing.--Ethan
Bass traps in the corners are 4' thick and 8ft tall
My very picky ears don't detect any such problems.
Have you ever measured the response using a microphone placed where your ears usually are?--Ethan
No dales & hills ever detected on the screen with the analyser mic. around 15" from the untreated backwall.
Next I tried the 38% rule from Ethan's website. Again forming an equal lateral triangle. This helped a lot with my bass issue, but it seemed to make the sound lack some depth and a bit flat. The vocals were also congested.
Not sure how that could happen, unless substantial averaging was applied. But even then, the comb filter response in front of a reflecting boundary is well known and repeatable. I'll be glad to run a sweep using Room EQ Wizard showing the response that occurs at that distance and post it here if you'd like.--Ethan