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To some degree, the TBRC you refer to simulates the non-DSP "double bass array". This quad sub setup works by mirroring the front two subwoofers on the rear wall, running them 180 degrees out of phase and with a delay proportionate to the time it takes from the front subs' output to reach them. In other words, the rear subs don't fire until you've already heard the output from the front subs. When they do eventually fire, the front + rear subwoofer outputs cancel each other behind the listening position, preventing reflections off the wall. I've seen the room response measurements of normal dual sub versus such quad sub setups, and the improvement is dramatic. Non-modal peaks and nulls from rear wall reflection are largely eliminated, as are most standing waves i.e. room modes.
The Meridian article is very good. One comment about it though -- while true, saying that room correction above 250hz produces more problems than it solves depends on the speakers and the particular correction product used. Why ?
Man, I thought I was the first to think of that because I'd never heard of anyone doing that. That's exactly what I'm planning when I built my HT room. Subwoofers front/rear/sides, all crossed over individually with a delayed, 180 degree bass signal. I thought I was pretty clever ...
And, our ears dismiss wall reflections as separate from the original sound. ...
To some degree, the TBRC you refer to simulates the non-DSP "double bass array". This quad sub setup works by mirroring the front two subwoofers on the rear wall, running them 180 degrees out of phase and with a delay proportionate to the time it takes from the front subs' output to reach them. In other words, the rear subs don't fire until you've already heard the output from the front subs. When they do eventually fire, the front + rear subwoofer outputs cancel each other behind the listening position, preventing reflections off the wall. I've seen the room response measurements of normal dual sub versus such quad sub setups, and the improvement is dramatic. Non-modal peaks and nulls from rear wall reflection are largely eliminated, as are most standing waves i.e. room modes. .
I'd put that frequency closer to 100 Hz or even lower. Heck, I'm not convinced that "room correction" is very useful at any frequency. One problem is the peaks and nulls are highly positional. Any correction you apply for one location is either inadequate somewhere else, or actually makes the response worse. I don't mean 10 feet away. ...
If one had two subs up front and one in the rear, but the seated position was closer to the rear, do you think it would work similarly? This makes sense in that the greater distance from the front would require the front subs to play much louder than the rears to have the same volume at the seated position. As such, if there were two up front (centered on the front wall), and one in the rear (also centered), then all three would be more or less equally stressed (since the ones up front would couple to each ...
John, if I understand what you're doing, all you'd be doing is actively canceling the bass. Active bass cancellation as Eric is suggesting works like this. 1. The bass impulse leaves the front subwoofers (let's assume in-wall subs for simplification.2. The bass impulse will hit the back wall (let's say 20' away) and much of that is reflected back towards the listening position. It takes, coincidentally, 20ms to get there. 3. A digital delay duplicates and delays the bass signal to the rear subwoofers (wired out of phase) by 20ms. 4. As the bass impulse bounces off the back wall, the rear subwoofers exactly duplicates the original impulse and launches it at, hopefully, the exact same time the original impulse bounces off the back wall. 5. The inverted and delayed bass impulse collides with a virtual opposite of itself and mixes together and essentially cancelling that energy by the time it gets to the listening position. 6. There is no subsequent reflection from the front wall, thereby totally cancelling the mode created by the 20' dimension. Get that?...
My main reason for suggesting two up front and one in the rear is I am in the process of installing an infinte baffle subwoofer with two Ascendant Audio Avalanche 18" drivers. They will be mounted in a manifold on the ceiling with the opening front and center and adjacent to the front wall. Since the two will fire out of or through a 20.75" x 20.75" hole, I figured if I mounted another Avalanche 18" in the ceiling at the back of the room, centered side to side and adjacent to the rear wall (except the driv ...