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I had planned on a size of 20'x30' with 9-10' ceiling.
That's a nice sized space. Remember a couple of rules.1. No dimensions equal or multiples of each other.2. W and L should be < 3x Height.Bryan
W+L<3H?W or L < 3H?
I went through the same thing about 8 years ago. Lessons learned:1. Yes room dimensions are critical and bigger is better. I happily followed the Cardas ratio for what he calls a "golden cubiod": 1 x 1.61 x 2.62 (so my room is 8 ft x 13 ft x 22 ft). I was limited by 8 foot ceilings. Tons of other ratios out there but based on limited ceiling height this is the best for maximizing the other dimensions while avoided whole number multiples of each dimension. As a result room treatments do almost no good (just aren't needed), but keep in mind I have nearly ideally "non-room-reactive" speakers too. I keep moving (6) GIK 244 high density fiberglass panels around to no affect.
OK, time to admit how much high school math I can't remember after 35 years. Can some one please explain "multiples of each other"?Thanks for all the responses. lots of good ideas.I am planning the room this large so that it can be more of a multi use space. The size of the room was the only thing in all our wants that the architect commented on. Might be tough to get, we'll see.
JLM could you please explain how your the isolated ground was done. Thanks, Mike
Multiples: If your room is 4 metres wide, a multiple is 8 or 12, so avoid a 8 metres long room, 7 metres would be nice.For a less ressonant room you may want use the golden ratio: 1 x 1,618 x 2,618 or 3x5x8, in a room is Hi=3m, Wide=5m and Depth=8m.
The 3 x 5 x 8 ratio is a very simple and helpful bit of advice. thank you. I'm planning a room that happens to be just about exactly that... what luck!
5:8 ratio (front/back wall and ceiling/floor)
The listening room used by the Canadian National Research Council (well known for audio research) follows IEC 268-13-1985 and is 6.7m x 4.1m x 2.8m.Search for the Bolt "blob" (ideal range of length/width ratios). Note some say that there cannot be an ideal, but why not try to get close?