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Reading his entire book, "Sound Reproduction" makes digesting this article quite a bit easier. Anyone pursuing design or setup of a listening room should really read the book for themselves.
And Now, What “Toole” Really Believes:By now I hope that readers have concluded that the matter of early reflections in rooms is not a simple one. There is no single “right” way to do things. About 37 years ago, when I was setting up the NRCC listening room, I ran a drapery track down the front portion of the side walls and across the wall of the room behind the loudspeakers, hanging 4-foot sections of densely-folded heavy drapes. The track was about 6 inches from the wall for good broadband absorption. These could be moved around, and in the case of the sidewall reflections, we quickly found that things sounded better if they were pushed back for more "spacious" classical music, and pulled out for "in your face" rock/pop stuff. I knew a couple of stereo enthusiasts who copied the idea at home. I concluded that, in terms of loudspeaker/room combinations, one size does not fit all. I believe it still to be true, but now we know a lot more about the factors that influence our opinions. Given the enormous variations in recordings, the absence of useful information on most loudspeakers, and the uncertainties of loudspeaker/room interactions, there can be no absolutely predictable outcomes. However, as has been found in many situations, human adaptation seems to save the day. We tend to get used to what we have, up to a point.
Odal3,Here is one strongly recommended by Andrew Jones:http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0123914213/ref=pd_aw_sim_14_1?ie=UTF8&dpID=51bj0YTZ3nL&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL300_SR300%2C300_&refRID=1RESN80KQR73WADPW8XC