0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 21764 times.
> Are high frequency standing waves just as problematic as low frequency standing waves? (i.e. will higher frequency standing waves increase amplitude as much as LF waves?). <Yes and yes. Many people don't even realize that standing waves can occur at higher frequencies. But they do, and you can hear them easily. Play a 2 or 3 KHz tone through both speakers and walk quickly from the front of the room toward the rear, and you'll hear the "picket fence" effect (a radio engineering term for the very same phenomenon) as the volume flutters rapidly.
I've read many interviews with movie mix engineers who confirm that all ambience and directional cues are embedded in the sound tracks. They all seem to agree that direct reflections are not desirable in a room because that just competes with what they're doing.
Standing waves occur any time two opposing wavefronts collide. Standing waves do not require resonance, nor must they fit exactly between two opposing surfaces. Some people lump standing waves and room modes together, but they're really very different things. All that's needed to create standing waves is for a sound source to strike a single boundary and reflect back into itself. That is, you can have standing waves outdoors against the brick wall of a building.
> These standing waves can stack, causing harmonic tones that rise in frequency <I'm not aware of standing waves causing Doppler shift, if that's what you mean.
Yes, it's indeed there. As I always say, empirical evidence trumps theory every time.
I am firmly in the camp that believes a listening room should not add its own character to the playback.
Quote from: Ethan Winer on 15 Aug 2006, 06:16 pmI am firmly in the camp that believes a listening room should not add its own character to the playback.As am I. I just believe that rolling off the high-frequency response in order to reduce first reflections is not a desireable trade-off, and that there are much more effective ways to reduce standing waves.
Personally I think most smaller rooms do need to "roll off" the highs slightly. The long low bass wavelengths can readily pass thru walls whereas the highs don't to such a degree. My feeling is that small rooms are unnaturally live because of this.
Some people lump standing waves and room modes together, but they're really very different things. All that's needed to create standing waves is for a sound source to strike a single boundary and reflect back into itself. That is, you can have standing waves outdoors against the brick wall of a building.