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John the shroud idea is great. Someone should produce & sell them. It certainly appears easier to damp the immediate area around the seat vs. the entire room. Why didn't anyone think of that before?
This was being done in the 70's, by the occasional audiophile. It's not that it hasn't been thought of - when I was testing out my room, I did a bunch of things that looked something like this, for some tests. But it's not practical for the masses, it rules out anything beyond 3.1 sound, and it's not cheap, or so I expect. Surrounding yourself in 6" of decent acoustical foam takes a lot of foam. .
If it could be manufactured in a form that was trivial to set up and tear down, though, it could be a boon to serious audiophiles who CANNOT, for non-negotiable reasons, treat their room.
John's design here is interesting - I bet it doesn't block much below 150Hz, and probably nothing below 60Hz or so - so you're still free to plant a sub anywhere in the room you like. It will block very little from the ceiling - blankets absorb next to nothing and mostly diffuse a bit - so there might be enough early reflection from the ceiling to fill in a little ambience. And of course, that bulk of foam in the center of the room is going to amount to significant "single mass treatment" for the room as a whole.
It won't treat the bass much of any, unless maybe the chair is parked at a bass mode, which I kind of doubt. It will absorb significant treble, though. I suspect things sound kind of odd *outside* the Chair of John... but the new C-D design might help fix that. Hey John, what did it cost to assemble?
What's the new "beefy" cabinet?
It looks a bit like this, except I now have the front in a matching color.It is primarily designed to further remove the room reflected sound at the listening area.It certainly is not a system everyone could use, but for those in small dedicated rooms it is an alternative to attempting to treat room reflections on the walls.Nearfield listening is stunning in its reality.
Very interesting. It reminds me my "Sound Cocoon" but in a smaller scale. I should have visited you while I was still in the US. Could you post a picture taken from the listening position? I wonder how much reflected sound coming from the front and side walls can enter the tent.Bruno
Dubravko, it's only my opinion, but I believe you should prepare for this invention to rock your listening world. It is an absolute breakthrough as far as I can tell, with no downside beyond the ones B has already articulcated.
John your room is totally nutz (in a good way, with all due respect...), like something from the sequel to Blade Runner or a short article at the end of the local news featuring an eccentric inventor...it makes Brian's LEDE affair look tame & almost normal, if that is possible...I'd not pass up a visit for anything if I was in SoCal.
Hi Jim,I can say however, that the "SONIC" of this arrangement is like something I have never heard...
Quote from: John CaslerHi Jim,I can say however, that the "SONIC" of this arrangement is like something I have never heard..... and also like something you will never hear in any real live aucoustic event .