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The diagram shows just a single ray emanating from the rear of the speaker (at a fairly extreme angle.) What about the infinite number of other sound rays at all other angles? How are you blocking first-reflection on those?Cheers,Dave.
Josh,Is that ray trace on the diagram at high frequency or low frequency? Actually, if you look at the MMG woofer panel horizontal polar response you'll see it becomes fairly directional above 1000Hz. (A deep null at about 2000Hz at 45 degrees.) The tweeter is much "wider" of course because it's much narrower.So, I think it illustrates the polar response (when crossover is included) is pretty much cylindrical for most of the frequency range. (Two cylinders....one on the front and one on the back...out of phase.) Thus, the single ray doesn't properly characterize the larger situation.I think the whole concept outlined here is overly simplistic to what's actually/really a very complicated acoustic environment. A solution in search of a problem......IMHO. Cheers,Dave.
Josh,Good info.I'm not sure our objective with a domestic listening room is the same as for a recording studio. Neither are we trying to create Boston Symphony Hall.To me, it's amazing the soundstage or depth or whatever you want to call it, that can be created by just two well-designed speakers optimally placed in a room. Part of the key to that success is to embrace/use reflections and not minimize them. I suppose I'm in the minority, but I think a listening room should be fairly "live." You won't see any "room treatments" in my listening room. Cheers,Dave.
No Jim I.messed with them a lot. You should see all the spots taped out. I had just never tried this specific orientation, with something blocking.Remember I've only had these seven months!
Calm down Jim. I'm talking about a small improvement in soundstage, nothing more.
Here's a diagram that illustrates some of the psychoacoustic effects of delayed reflections at various levels:In practice, dipoles seem to gain depth as they're moved further out into the room up to about 15' or even more.The objective of delaying the first reflections by at least 10 ms is to get them out of the image shift region (in which the apparent source appears to move away from the loudspeaker in the direction of the reflection) and into the spatial impression region, so that's one criterion that applies both to studios and home listening. I think it's also the objective of using diffusion in front -- the diffusers reduce the amplitude of the early reflection (though not, from the figures I've seen, all the way down to the desired >-20 dB threshold), without absorbing the reverberant energy and making the room unnaturally dead. As such, diffusion allows a small room to behave acoustically more like a large one. It also reduces interaural correlation, which is negatively correlated with the subjective quality of reverberation.One problem with all of this is that we're using the mechanical equivalent of artificial reverb, and a one-size-fits-all solution doesn't really work, since recording are made in venues of various sizes from small studios and clubs to cathedrals. I've known people to absorb the rear wave because they listened mostly to chamber music and didn't want the effect of a large hall.
C'mon. Obviously you don't need to draw an infinite number of rays on your diagram. But I think you should draw one at about every 15 degrees (front and back.) I don't think that would be too busy looking. It looks to me like your FRT panels are fairly optimally placed to try and "block" first reflection points in your room and achieve your objective. However, my point (poorly made I guess) is that you've got the wrong speakers if this is a primary objective for you. Magnepans are just the wrong speakers for small rooms IMHO. Okay, now I'll get beat up and laughed at by someone who says his 20.1's just kill in a 100 square foot room. Anyways, some sort of very controlled directivity speakers....much like the Geddes offerings would seem to be the optimal playback system for your environment. Had you considered something like that?Cheers,Dave.
(can't edit so have to post anew) Getting Magnepans right seems very much like focusing a pair of lenses. It will be fun to one day soon have software that just reads our entire room and everything in it (camera based), and is able to give us the exact location we need to be for perfect imaging. With Magnepans it's a game of inches and sometimes all you want is to just have it right the first time, not a voyage of mistakes.
Josh:Where did you find that graph? There is an awesome amount of info represented by it. I'd like to learn more.And check out my latest version of FRTs. The second set might make even chamber music afficionados happy, since the rear reflections are well controlled - at least to my ears. MGbert
I honestly believe I found a way to make them sing in a small space, and like many engineering solutions it is functionally elegant and aesthetically awful. If someone else here can take the concept and increase the WAF, I'd be all ears - no pride of authorship here.