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I still think he'd be better off with more bass trapping in the corners behind the speakers -- white real traps mondo traps would go there, or the real traps soffit traps. Some 8th nerve corner and seam traps wouldn't be bad, either.
Your room is half of your sound system...
Quote from: ScottMayoYour room is half of your sound system...No, your roon IS your sound system. Without treatment it will sound like an untreated small room with two speakers in it, after treatment it will sound like a treated (dead) small room with two speakers in it
Quote from: cseroQuote from: ScottMayoYour room is half of your sound system...No, your roon IS your sound system. Without treatment it will sound like an untreated small room with two speakers in it, after treatment it will sound like a treated (dead) small room with two speakers in it There's no denying that small rooms are a big problem. I have a computer nook that's about 8'x8'x10' or so - I haven't even tried to fix the sound in there.
Most audiophile rooms are "small" with very loud early reflections and too short decay compared to any real venue where music usually performed.Treatment makes the early reflections not as loud, but the decay even shorter.
If you don't have bass humps, why would you need bass traps. The room has a big hump at 30Hz which disappears when I turn off the Larger Subwoofer. However, for Rock and Soundtracks the hump at 30Hz is quite enjoyable. Since I have a volume control on the external crossover that goes to the Larger, I can control the size of the hump from huge to non-existant For Classical or Jazz, there is almost no information at 30Hz, so the hump does not exist even with the Larger turned on and cranked up. Best of ...
Another little solution to your two humps (if they ever do begin to bother you is the R-DES syststem from AV123 (although I think they just re-did the software in it again)
I agree the room is a big deal, but before you spend the dough there, figure out what the issue is you need to correct. This may sound obvious, but money should not be blindly thrown at room treatments any more than wires or preamplifiers, or anything else.
The same goes for my Twisted Sister albums. Great recordings these are not, but with the new room acoustics, they sound significantly more real and alive.
I find it hard to believe, though, that classical music doesn't activate low bass:http://www.pcreview.co.uk/forums/thread-388483.phpCertainly the piano, bass tuba and double bass are going to activate your lower room modes. And don't forge ...