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Ahhh the priveleges of having a dedicated room for audio listening. I'm gonna have to find some more tactful looking room treatments. John, do you know of any places in LA to get some 2" rigid fiberglass?
It would be great if you guys would elaborate just a little on what you have done to your rooms. I know it's pretty much relative to the room specifics but I'd still like to hear what your doing.The most troublesome area is the lower frequencies. I've got four bass traps, one in each corner. Also the entire rear wall is covered with 3" wedge foam. Both side walls and ceilieng are covered 5' out with 3' and 4" wedge foam. The room is 12'w x 7'2"h x 17'2" d. Carpet on extra heavy pad is over concrete. This is stuff that not everybody may be able to get away with especially if they need to use their living room for their systems. I'm no expert but I suspect my room may be considered heavily damped and ambience is excellent, the best I've heard. The walls that are not damped just have pictures on them. In my last house I only had one bass trap and the wall behind the system covered with 3" foam. I started with a little bit of foam at first, say 4x8 feet worth and found that was quite significant. So of course I added more and more. My point is that the more I did the better the sound became. This improvement is much more than changing cables or amps ever thought of doing and was very cost effective considering the gains. Just wish it didn't take me so long to discover it. Acoustics is major major major! Maybe Ethan can chime in here but I'm suspecting a very reflective room to be quite problematic compared to one with plenty of absorption. A side benefit to the room treatment is that your room will become much "quieter". The beauty of all this is that you can actually know that you hear an improvment for your cash, unlike wires.
There's an insulation warehouse very close to my place where you can get fiberglass. I didn't call every place in LA, but I did call about 30 shops with insulation related names and these guys are it. I got my panels there.CWCI INSULATION OF L A749 9TH AVE, HACIENDA HEIGHTS, CA 91745Phone: (626) 369-4424It's close to the 60 and 605.
After fixing the obvious ferq anomalies in a room one problem still remains, namely the stereo triangle. With it you can never have the right room treatment, because if you want to hear what is on the record then you have to make the room dead. BUT! If you make the room dead the stereo triangle does not reproduce the necessary ambience info correctly to make the sound listenable, so you have to make the room lively, and you have to include your room's sound in the reproduction.You always have to mix the two and there is no optimal solution, only "not that bad".Frank
If you make the room dead the stereo triangle does not reproduce the necessary ambience info correctly to make the sound listenable
Warnerwh -- when you say your rear wall is covered with 3 inch foam are you saying that the foamed wall is the wall behind you? Then are your speakers at the live end of the room with you sitting at the dead end? If so, I guess I am mixed up on the LEDE concept. Your room is nearly the EXACT dimensions of mine which also has a carpet covered concrete floorPaul
Great thread! But I would say that you are only a Room Treatment "Snob" if you feel that a room can only be treated properly with expensive brand-name room treatments...