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Quote from: 95bcwh on 12 Jul 2006, 06:55 amjoamonte, It's a nice listening room that you have. I must try some of these diffusor stuff once I move into my new house when I have a bigger room to work with.. What speakers are those in your pictures? barryThe speaker is Marten From Sweden.http://www.stereophile.com/loudspeakerreviews/205marten/
joamonte, It's a nice listening room that you have. I must try some of these diffusor stuff once I move into my new house when I have a bigger room to work with.. What speakers are those in your pictures? barry
Joamonte, When you said "I like the effect of a diffuser at the centre of loudspeaker", do you mean placing a diffuser at the center between the two speakers, so that your left speaker, diffuser and right speaker form a straight line? Or the diffuser is slightly behind? barry
The "Abffusor" which for Absorbing purpose is make of OC 705..The "Diffractal" which use for Duffuser is make of Plywood or MDF or Chipboard or Timber....Seem like in this acoustic forum member are quite unware of RPG product ...
Quote from: joamonte on 13 Jul 2006, 01:50 pmThe "Abffusor" which for Absorbing purpose is make of OC 705..The "Diffractal" which use for Duffuser is make of Plywood or MDF or Chipboard or Timber....Seem like in this acoustic forum member are quite unware of RPG product ... I just got into this hobby less than 6 months.. so pls don't stereotyping the whole community. Also I know from the outset that I don't have the luxury (room constraint + I'm in a temporary rented property) to go for diffusor type of room treatment so I didn't do as much research on this topic as I did on the absorption type.Yes I'm ignorant, but it doesn't mean that all the members here are ignorant.
Joamonte,Your response graph looks typical of a room with a high amount of acoustic distortion, albeit with abated irregularities. Several significant peaks and dips of 8-14db below 1KHz, and an overall high frequency response which is a good 8db or more down at 8KHz and above, with almost no perceived energy (-12+db) above 10KHz. This lack of high frequency response is almost certainly responsible for the perceived reduction or elimination of echo.With something that would abate some of the acoustic distortion, you'd see a reduction of the peak and dips in your lower frequency band of several db, and your overall upper frequency response would increase, without bringing echo back. Of course, with all that absorption, you'll never get it level. To accomplish that you'd need to start removing the absorptive products like the foam.Best Regards,Nathan LoyerEighth Nerve