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I think you've hit the nail on the thumb.Directional control requires big ugly things because of the wavelengths involved. About 1' at 1000 Hz, 10' at 100 Hz. The waves just diffract around anything small.One of the few exceptions to this -- dipoles and other phase cancellation designs, e.g., cardioids. But they have a limited effect.You can make a small sound source directional by using ultrasonics and relying on the nonlinearity of the air to shift the frequencies down, and there are commericial directional speaker systems that work that way, but the SPL's are very high and there are some real questions about the health in long-term listening.Near field listening can help, if that's OK in your setup. But it isn't a cure all.This I think is one of the biggest unanswered questions in audio -- how do you take the room out of the picture without making something huge and un wife friendly.One interesting possibility is to make fresnel deflectors, e.g., triangular wedges with absorption on one side. I believe there's one guy who does this in studios, his technique is closely guarded but I reverse engineered the idea from reading a description of what he'd accomplished. BTW, speaking of dipoles, rather than adding the second barrier, why not just adjust the toe-in of the speakers so that the sidewall first reflection is at the dipole null? I've experimented with that and it works quite well.
The size shrunk when I realized that symmetry was important, so after moving shelves around my 19 foot length became 11 feet.
Thanks for posting this MGbert, I've been following with great interest since your first post. But related to the above quote, could you let us in on the why we are seeing the unfinished wall construction and why you needed to take a 19'x11' room and constrict it to 11' sq. I'm sure you have good reasons for all, but curious minds want to know as on the face of it the solution to the small room problem seems to be use the 19' of the room available. Could this be an attic space?And for the materials, I was thinking something like Lowe's Pactiv 4'x8'x3/4" Extruded Polystyrene sheets. Lightweight, easy to handle and cut if needed, fairly reflective in the frequencies we're talking about and a tiny bit absorptive in the frequencies below, and easy to make floor to ceiling in the spaces most people inhabit. http://www.lowes.com/pd_304087-210-304087.0_4294858106__?productId=3122443&Ns=p_product_qty_sales_dollar|1&pl=1¤tURL=%3FNs%3Dp_product_qty_sales_dollar%7C1&facetInfo= Anyway, thanks again for posting, it's been fun following the thread.
I admit to being more than a little confused about just where the undesirable reflections that MG-bert is trying delay are coming from. It appears that the front wall,ceiling and sidewalls are covered with at least 4 inches of fiberglass insulation with a layer of craft paper facing into the room. Surely the front wall, so covered cannot be source of significant reflections with exception of those whose wavelengths that are short enough to be reflected by the craft paper. Perhaps moving the racks of CDs and records from close proximity to the MMGs and placing them against the side walls beside the MMGs would be an interesting experiment. This would greatly increase the time it took for reflected sound from the media storage racks to reach the listening position. By moving the CD storage racks on the right side of room to a position directly against the wall the time for the first reflection from this location would be increased by over 8ms. The mean distance of the MMGs from the front wall appears to be 4 ft., if the panels were moved 1 ft. closer to the listening position the time for the reflection from the front wall will be increased from about 8ms to roughly 10ms. In fact it appears that a 10ms delay or greater could be achieved from all surfaces by a simple relocation of the media storage racks relative to the MMGs.Scotty
But since it is after all "only a shed", I never felt the need to do aesthetic stuff like drywall. If I become convinced that sonics would improve, then perhaps. I'll definitely look into the product you recommended. Moving stuff around to do it would be a big PITA at this point, however.
Oh by the way the MMGs are shimmed to be fully upright - as you know, the Gunn mod has them tilted back by design - and tweeters in. And as far as raising the MMGs off the floor - conventional wisdom says this should kill bass response, but no such thing happens in my room, FWIW. Here's a dirty secret: I use a Behringer DEQ2496 for room EQ as well as a DAC and balance control for my passive preamp. Here is the frequency response at the listening seat. Each horizontal dashed line represents a 2.5 dB change. Note that the average level is about -60 dB, and that the response at 45 Hz is only down by 5 dB at -65dB. Not shabby at all, and even though the FRTs help I have to give the Gunn mod a lot of credit. And no, the EQ settings do not boost any frequency below 80 Hz; in fact, I cut the level at 63 Hz by about 4 dB, there is so much power there!
I admit to being more than a little confused about just where the undesirable reflections that MG-bert is trying delay are coming from. It appears that the front wall,ceiling and sidewalls are covered with at least 4 inches of fiberglass insulation with a layer of craft paper facing into the room. Surely the front wall, so covered cannot be source of significant reflections with exception of those whose wavelengths that are short enough to be reflected by the craft paper.
Perhaps moving the racks of CDs and records from close proximity to the MMGs and placing them against the side walls beside the MMGs would be an interesting experiment. This would greatly increase the time it took for reflected sound from the media storage racks to reach the listening position. By moving the CD storage racks on the right side of room to a position directly against the wall the time for the first reflection from this location would be increased by over 8ms. The mean distance of the MMGs from the front wall appears to be 4 ft., if the panels were moved 1 ft. closer to the listening position the time for the reflection from the front wall will be increased from about 8ms to roughly 10ms. In fact it appears that a 10ms delay or greater could be achieved from all surfaces with the exception of the floor, by a simple relocation of the media storage racks relative to the MMGs.Scotty
@Josh358: it occurs to me that this latest config might actually work in your fireplace room as a way of taming the influence of the fireplace. MGbert
Thanks, sounds interesting. I'll be interested to see the sketch when you post it, it's kind of hard to visualize what you've done from the description -- I'd have to go back and reread the thread since you've used differential encoding.
Don't you get bass reinforcement from the side traps? Not that that would necessarily be a problem with the MMG's . . .