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The one exception is that it feels like some of the midbass has been sucked out completely. This issue arose only after both walls were treated.
I would definately lose the bass traps in the front corner floor. I know the corners are perfect trapping locations, but with a dipole you are shooting right into them. In my HT system I used them, but they weren't even considered in the Maggie system.Where are your FRP traps? Maybe you could move the tritraps to the back and take the back ones to the side for the first reflection point?As a side note, how high do you have your diffusion placed? It seems to be too high since it goes above the speaker and still leaves lower stuff undiffused, but maybe that is just a much shorter speaker than your 3.6's will be. My 4'x4' block of skylines don't extend past the top or bottom of my 3.6's.
Well, 200-500 is going to be sucked up by pretty much everything - even the Sonex. Are you sure this is the range you think you're missing? Can you describe what parts of the music don't seem right to you? Just trying to get a better handle on things to work through with you.Bryan
Quote from: samplesj on 2 Aug 2007, 12:34 pmI would definately lose the bass traps in the front corner floor. I know the corners are perfect trapping locations, but with a dipole you are shooting right into them. In my HT system I used them, but they weren't even considered in the Maggie system.....The 244s and tri-traps along the ground help out quite a bit in my acoustic space, I've found. I am also using an ACI Titan II for the last few octaves, and the bass tightens up considerably with the combination of diagonal 244s + tri-traps.
I would definately lose the bass traps in the front corner floor. I know the corners are perfect trapping locations, but with a dipole you are shooting right into them. In my HT system I used them, but they weren't even considered in the Maggie system.....
Oh, and... I just got my 3.6s! Even though I have to wait another 2 weeks for my Bryston amps, I can tell that they sound less lean than the MMGs... by FAR. Maybe the treatments were doing the right thing, after all.
The Tri's laid on the ground like that should still allow good spherical bass radiation from the Maggies with no issues.The Monsters on the rear are there specifically to help with killing the bounce off the back wall that will cause the null based on the distance from ears to rear wall/speakers to ears. I will agree that a potential slight seat move might help the situation. Sometimes when you kill one issue, another that was being cancelled by the one you just killed pops up. Bryan
The Titan is a nice little sub. I would agree though that at most, I'd use it from maybe 40hz or so down unless having the flexibitliy of moving it around helps smooth response. The 3.6's will do surprisingly well with a bit of in-room gain.
One thing you might consider is to take the 244's that are straddling the wall/floor boundary and hang them up high straddling the wall/wall corner in the front of the room. That'll let you move one of the diffusors down a bit. A little space between the diffusors will help a bit. I'd put them right behind the speakers. One pair I'd also potentially put up high on the front wall or up high on the rear wall if there is space there.Bryan
When you say "space between the diffusors", do you mean horizontal space or vertical space? The pictures I've seen of people with other diffusors (e.g. QRD704s and Skylines) shows no spacing between them. Is the spacing recommendation due to the GIK D1's design?Thanks again, Bryan!-- Nils
Hope that is coherant. I am on vacation and my wife is giving me the evil eye - no time for spellcheck. I'll check back tonight to see if you have any further questions.
Actually, I was thinking more of hanging them vertically straddling the wall/wall corner but up where the walls meet the ceiling. Bryan