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Tell me what part of Before and After is not clear and to you I'll be glad to elaborate.The room shown in those graphs is 16 x 11.5 by 8 feet high. Full details here:Hearing is Believing--Ethan
Mirage is no longer in business.
I can give a demo of the benefits to any of you that just want to call me. 651-330-9871 if you want to hear this yourself.
The only down side is that my cat can climb it (Spidercat) and once in a while he brings a panel down in a heap on top of him. Fortunately easy to put back up and fix too.Frank Van Alstine
Sorry A.J. But I'll take Toole over you when comes to room acoustics.
As far as dipoles go most musical sources (and every microphone I know of) does not generate sound in a dipole manner. It's just not natural to have out of phase back waves.
. I slogged through that infomercial to the point "With the room empty..."
AJ, I can't believe you'd put yourself in the same league as Floyd E. Toole or pass off a comparison in terms of "preferences or appeals".
How mixes properly translate into playback can IMO be best answered by looking at what the professionals do (use near field monitors).
I know this goes back again to relating recording and playback and brings up pros vs. audiophiles, but in general I know whose opinion I'd trust first (the same one who recorded/mixed the music I enjoy listening to).
The best one can do with speaker design is to try to have a design where the speaker either uses the room or tries to not be sensitive to boundary interactions the best it can.
No speaker design can eliminate out of phase reflections, cross channel reflections, ringing over time, etc.
One can certainly help with frequency response issues with careful seating and speaker placement. One cannot address decay time via speaker/seating placement.
So can we now agree that the room properly designed and treated for a particular speaker's dispersion pattern is the best option ?
If you choose the speaker first design the room around it. charles
That does not then make treating the remaining problems that exist in pretty much all rooms 'nonsense'.
I have yet to be in a room used for listening that didn't benefit from some sort of treatment.
Fact is that pretty much all untreated rooms have many of the same issues - reflections, long decay times, etc.
I guess I'm blind and I've studied.
Was Toole's research done blind?
What makes his research and opinion any more valid than anyone elses? How about the BBC? How about Harman Intl?
They're real rooms with real problems.
Much of what I have seen from his research simply says that not all reflections are damaging and some can be used to your advantage. Nobody is disagreeing with that.
But to make blanket statements saying that every room all the time should never be treated in a certain way is not correct and I don't believe he ever said that, nor did I.
Just the same as saying that all rooms all the time SHOULD be treated in the same way.
How are you going to address a room that is open on one side but not the other? Deal with the reflections and additional boundary gain from that side? Fix the imaging always wanting to pull to one side?
I just worked with a room of a person who used Toole's formulas and theory to set up his room. Turned out to be a pretty good starting point. Guess what though, still had response issues and the decay time was still too long in the bass. I asked him to move his mic/seating position. His response was that it would just do X to move the problem in frequency as Toole predicts. Guess what, it didn't, it got better. Measured response did not map to what the formulas said. Doesn't mean I'm a genius, just that theory is just that, theory. Predictions. Theory is great, measurements always trump theory.
Never said you couldn't treat a room and make it sound worse. Don't put words in my mouth - nice try though.
Once in a blue moon you'll find a room that is very good in terms of response, walls have been splayed to push reflections behind, setup can be done without regard to other furnishings, WAF, etc. with no treatment.
Still doesn't address decay time.
Never, always, none, and all very rarely are accurate ways to look at things.