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Hey Steve, amazing news!I see several have already mentioned HP's room 2. I asked Wendell about that a few days ago and he said Maggies have always done well in that room, even Tympanis. We were speculating as Rollo did that the angled corners had something to do with that. It seems to me, looking from the picture, that they would delay the sound that would ordinarily be the troublesome corner second reflection. This is what makes the sound from dipoles wrap around the walls in a small room. The angled corners would work like the angled facets that are used to make a reflection-free zone in a studio control room, delaying early reflections by at least 5 ms, preferably more, because the ear uses them to judge the size of an acoustical space, and because early reflections can cause positional shift and coloration.Here's the photo of Listening Room 2, it should warm the hearts of all of us crazy enough to put large Maggies in small rooms:http://www.hpsoundings.com/2012/12/1170/Though not necessarily wives who grow suspicious when they see us in the living room corner with sheetrock and nails . . .
Really a rectangle of good proportion
If the ceiling is 8', it's actually a rectangle of horrific proportions - 16x12x8 yields lots of common modes. It's a good thing that 4'4" extension to the doorway exists on the one side of the rear of the room. I'd imagine the beveled corners up front help a bit too.BTW, I'd take Rm 1 any day - love those Scaenas!
Good point about the angled walls. Also lots of wood trim to diffuse the sound. Another factor is the length of the room. Really a rectangle of good proportion. Somewhere in one of the older Absolute sound issues are the dimensions of HPs room. charles
HP's Music Room 2:
Scaenas are in Room 3:http://www.hpsoundings.com/2012/11/reference-system-report-room-3-2/
oval bases that Magnepan supplies.
I think that I'll wind up with more bass than I wish but Kara Chafee was good enough to run some calculations for me a few months ago and I can fix that by swapping out two output caps in the preamp. The audio industry really has a lot of good people in it.
I don't think so...I think just the other way around, the 20.7's were properly set up....well into the room and without room treatment other than carpeting and chairs for listening. Jim
As Wendell points out, a large woofer will make too much bass in a small room, a small woofer too little in a big one. Hence the idea of using the DWM to boost midbass inlarger rooms. Too much bass is a good thing, though, since it's easy to equalize down, and you end up with extra headroom! I think we sometimes take the purist thing to extremes, e.g., the absence of tone controls and the aversion to equalization, which can improve just about any speaker/room combination if done right.
I think you just like to argue...I've heard the 20.1s set up with the right subs a number of times, so I know it can be done properly. Just like the ML CLX, it's tough to get right.