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I would also like to add that I live in an old rented house with a boulder cellar foundation and a sagging wood floor.with a sub on the floor,the whole room became an extension of the sub and it just muddied up the bass. Getting the sub off the floor and isolating it cleaned this up considerably. It may not be an ideal answer but it was my answer that works. Just thought I'd share, FWIW. Cheers,Robin
I wonder if isolating it made more of a difference than raising it, although this would depend on how tall you are and how tall your ceilings are. I also wonder if putting it so close to your right speaker may have significantly improved integration with the mains.Whatever happened to the RealTrap Soffit?Young-Ho
I apologize, Ethan, if cutting and pasting violates any rules of fair use
Quote from: satfrat on 17 Dec 2007, 02:36 pmI would also like to add that I live in an old rented house with a boulder cellar foundation and a sagging wood floor.with a sub on the floor,the whole room became an extension of the sub and it just muddied up the bass. Getting the sub off the floor and isolating it cleaned this up considerably. It may not be an ideal answer but it was my answer that works. Just thought I'd share, FWIW. Cheers,RobinRobin,Thanks for sharing what you came up with to isolate the sub - fascinating solution. I've learned a lot of new things about sub placements from this thread already. I am wondering though, how did you come up such a complex concoction for the isolation platform? Is it based on ASC or some other design that's out there or just trial and error?Inquiring minds want to know Tom
You wrote earlier that "People completely forget about the height of the sub. It's just as critical as the other two." Again for the reasons noted above, I think it's much less critical because of the average seated listener in an average room. The ASC SubTrap retails for $398. Why recommend spending hundreds of dollars on a problem that's likely not to be significant for most listeners? I don't know how much your product will cost, so perhaps it will be so ridiculously cheap what is a relatively minor issue for most folks, which could typically be easily fixed by slouching a little in the chair, which some people do as they relax, anyway.
Bryan, neither white paper shows a real-world investigation or case where the subwoofer is placed in the center of the room. If you can reference which paper you're talking about and specify the slide number, I would appreciate. There are illustrations showing how putting the subwoofer in midpoint between two boundaries avoids exciting odd-order modes related to the length and width of a room, but it will still excite the even-order ones. Surely this can't be what you're talking about.I specifically referenced one book (Everest) and one paper (Toole's white paper on bass) in my third post, and you wrote in follow-up "Yes, I've read those papers and the books - some of them many times. Many of them deal with purely axial theory and relate in terms of purely rigid rooms (none are) and perfectly rectangular spaces (few are)." Since I only specifically referenced one book and one paper, I got confused about what you meant. Clearly, you meant that you read those papers and books I wasn't talking about. I probably haven't read them.You wrote earlier that "People completely forget about the height of the sub. It's just as critical as the other two." Again for the reasons noted above, I think it's much less critical because of the average seated listener in an average room. The ASC SubTrap retails for $398. Why recommend spending hundreds of dollars on a problem that's likely not to be significant for most listeners? I don't know how much your product will cost, so perhaps it will be so ridiculously cheap what is a relatively minor issue for most folks, which could typically be easily fixed by slouching a little in the chair, which some people do as they relax, anyway.Acecdotal evidence is great but of limited value. Many people have tried expensive cables, wood resonators, sticky dots, cable lifts, and quantum modifiers and found them to make a significant difference in their listening experience. People tried the Cathedral Sound Room Dampening Panels that are discussed on Ethan's website; this product was even "highly recommended" in Positive Feedback! Young-Ho
Ethan, You surprise me. As many times as I've seen you post about how just a few inches can completely change the curve you hear... If you look at the distribution of the nulls and peaks:
Quote from: bpape on 17 Dec 2007, 04:35 pmEthan, You surprise me. As many times as I've seen you post about how just a few inches can completely change the curve you hear... If you look at the distribution of the nulls and peaks:Yes, we all know that the response changes significantly over small distances. But I have a lot of bass traps, and that greatly reduces the change. More so than adding mid/high frequency absorption reduces the changes at mid/high frequencies. Even with all my bass traps (43 now, plus two bass trap / diffusors), the bass response still changes a little around the room. We all know this is inevitable too. My point is that even though my own setup is fairly far from the ideal - whether one prefers 38 percent or 33 percent - the bottom line is the bass response and overall sound quality in my room are fabulous. So I'm satisfied, and I'm done tweaking. Also, the 38 percent "rule" is purely theoretical. As we know now after my illuminating posts a few years ago at Recording.org, modes as measured can vary a lot from what's predicted due to wall construction and other reasons. So a rule like this applies only in a cement bunker. Anywhere else I'd say it's more of a starting point.--Ethan