0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 27326 times.
What I don't understand is how GIF & Realtraps can continue to downplay inteference of multiple reflected sound from the wall corners, ceiling corners, wall/ceiling surfaces where sound waves are being the most disorted by saying that a single wall reflection point is a rooms biggest obstacle to be solved by ONLY your product? That to me doesn't make any sense. I would much rather have a product that'll combat mulitple reflection points long before a product that'll only deal with a singular reflection point. Every room treatment product in this thread has it's place as far as I'm concerned but there's some BS that doesn't. And btw, this little 2 on 1 is getting a waaay old too. My $.02 to all you sirs,RobinPS: JohnR beat me too it.
In general, it's better if Industry Participants do not take shots at each other in the open forum.Things are already tenuous enough with the commercial activity going on in this supposedly non-commercial circle.ThanksJohnR
What I don't understand is how GIF & Realtraps can continue to downplay inteference of multiple reflected sound from the wall corners, ceiling corners, wall/ceiling surfaces where sound waves are being the most disorted by saying that a single wall reflection point is a rooms biggest obstacle to be solved by ONLY your product? That to me doesn't make any sense. I would much rather have a product that'll combat mulitple reflection points long before a product that'll only deal with a singular reflection point. Every room treatment product in this thread has it's place as far as I'm concerned but there's some BS that doesn't.
Past experience has shown that there is no value to having vendors battle out their own version of what is or is not "scientific" or "truthful" (which, to many people, amounts to the same thing) on the open (and non-commercial) forum.There are plenty of mechanisms available here for advertising, including Industry Ads and Industry Talk. George and others, please don't make me enforce the already existing rules about this. Your own experience as a non-committed person is of course, completely valid.
I'm sure either would still be posting if we said we were going to DIY the room instead.
Well there is your problem right there (or one of them any way). If you shoot them together using the same signal then you'll get gain in some areas (as both speakers are coupling and doubling output) and in other areas you'll get dips form cancellation (comb filtering effects). You might find that if you move your mic over 6" or a foot you might get a peak where there once was a dip and dip where there once was a peak. Do each speaker separately and then you'll know what you really have.
Hi Danny,We listen with both speakers so wouldn't it make sense to play both speakers and try to correct for flattest response with position and room treatment?