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Bass traps can help a lot, but moving the speakers and/or your listening position can also make a huge difference. Modes are a function of your room and are based on math- you can't really change them. But moving the transducer or the listener can change the way the room is engaged, if that makes sense.
It's because the sound waves don't stand still. They constructively and destructively interfere. It's the standing wave PATTERN that stands still.
I assume we're still talking about bass.
If bass comes from two opposite directions and arrive at the listening position in phase, they will constructively interfere. The incident and reflected waves do not stand still.
this is a semantic argument at this point.
In his book and white papers, Toole shows examples where reducing the amplitude of a bass mode through equalization reduces the decay time of the mode to a level similar to non-modal bass frequencies.
you had, in the past, argued very strongly that equalization might reduce the amplitude peak for a single listening position but doesn't affect modal ringing at all.
bass ringing ... can occur at modal or nonmodal frequencies
I'll leave it at that. No more from me on the subject.
To Youngho.....Thanks for your input about certain ear disorders. Due to some of your statements, I did a lot of research about fluid behind the ear drumb & I feel more than positive that this is what was causing the feeling of fullness & the feeling of swellness in my ears. This really comes to light when I listen to my music. Last night I decided to give a few LONG & HARD yawns while tilting my head from side to side. This must have opened up my eustachain tubes enough to let some of this fluid to trickle down my throat. It definitely had a funny taste & it definitely worked. The pressure went away. I will see a doctor soon. Thanks, Bill
Quote from: youngho on 23 Jan 2009, 08:01 pmIt's because the sound waves don't stand still. They constructively and destructively interfere. It's the standing wave PATTERN that stands still.Can you explain the distinction between modal standing waves between two boundaries, and non-modal standing waves from a reflection off a single boundary outdoors? In other words, since both create constructive and destructive interference, what is different in the waves in these two situations? What makes one "standing waves" and the other not?
QuoteI assume we're still talking about bass.Frequency has nothing to do with this. What happens at 40 Hz can also happen at 4 KHz.
QuoteIf bass comes from two opposite directions and arrive at the listening position in phase, they will constructively interfere. The incident and reflected waves do not stand still.Again, what is it about modal waves that's different?
Quotethis is a semantic argument at this point.Probably. But I still fail to see why resonance has anything to do with this.
QuoteIn his book and white papers, Toole shows examples where reducing the amplitude of a bass mode through equalization reduces the decay time of the mode to a level similar to non-modal bass frequencies.Yes, I've seen that and I believe it. But - and this is a huge one - Floyd never shows that happens a few inches away from the point where the EQ was tweaked. If the EQ is adjusted for minimum ringing with the microphone in one location, but all the ringing comes back two inches away, then it's a technical curiosity but not a practical solution.
Quoteyou had, in the past, argued very strongly that equalization might reduce the amplitude peak for a single listening position but doesn't affect modal ringing at all.I understand it is possible to create EQ that is exactly equal and opposite to what the room does at resonance. If you put two equalizers in series, boost one with a high Q which also adds ringing, and cut the second EQ with the same Q, the ringing will indeed be countered. But again, I need to see what happens at nearby locations.
Quotebass ringing ... can occur at modal or nonmodal frequenciesThat's a new one on me!
It's not the "reflected back" but rather the "and forth" that makes the standing wave special.
the single boundary is simply an approximation of a standing wave
This is unlikely, given the type of reflections that occur with 4 KHz waves. The wavelength at 4 KHz is significantly less than a foot, and the wavelength at 40 Hz is 28 feet.
for standing waves to occur, there need to be the incident and reflected waves (and the reflections of the reflected waves, and the reflections of THOSE reflections, etc.
Unless I'm mistaken.
I believe that you'll ultimately agree that physicists seem to consider standing waves to different from other forms of interference
If - and this is a huge if - "all the ringing came back," then the equalization would never have reduced the decay time of the mode to that level in the first place. Instead, this approximates a minimum phase phenomena. Two inches would be unlikely to be sufficient to raise the amplitude perceived at the listening position back to the original level
Toole readily admits that equalization is only effective for a single listening position. Most listeners only occupy a single position at a time.
Boost a single bass frequency or a narrow frequency range to +12 dB
or listen to a poorly designed ported loudspeaker or subwoofer.
At this point, this is pretty much as much as I know, so I doubt I have much else to offer on the subject.
the degree of reinforcement is obviously much less than with a second parallel boundary.
As I see it, acoustic interference is the parent effect, and under that are comb filtering and modal resonance, in that order....Play a 1 KHz tone through your speakers in a fairly live room. Go to the back of the room, then walk slowly toward the speakers in the front. You'll hear the volume go up and down repeatedly. This works at 4 KHz too, but then you have to walk very slowly to clearly hear the peaks and nulls come and go. This is the same "picket fence" effect that happens with FM radio as you slow down at a stop light with a large truck etc nearby....All you need is one reflection. You do not need "reflection off reflections," and that just adds secondary "parasitic" effects that obfuscate the issue.... I once considered that I was mistaken, but after seeing this perfect quote in Philip Newell's Book Recording Studio Design I knew I was right:..."It should be stressed that standing waves always exist when like waves interfere, whether a resonance situation exists or not, and that the common usage of the term 'standing wave' to describe only resonant conditions is both erroneous and misleading."
Again, standing waves can occur in electrical wires at the point of termination when an impedance mismatch causes the wave to reflect back into the oncoming source. This is an important principle in radio engineering and, clearly, there is no resonance. The very same impedance mismatch that causes standing waves at the end of an RG58 wire happens when sound waves hit a rigid boundary and reflect back.
What I think you're missing is that the absolute SPL at any given cubic centimeter in a typical room is the sum of the direct sound, plus many competing reflections. Moving even a few inches can make a large change in the response even at very low frequencies. This graph shows the response in a 16 by 11.5 by 8 foot room at two locations only four inches away:Note that the peak at 42 Hz varies by 3 dB for these two nearby locations, and there's still a 1 dB difference even as low as 27 Hz. The null at 71 Hz in one location becomes a peak at the other! More here:
Adult ears are about 6 inches apart. So based on my graph above, EQ cannot even make the response flat, or the same, for both ears at the same time! It is this critical balance between the direct sound and multiple reflections that prevents EQ from reducing ringing for more than a single small location. These multiple reflections also cause a room not to behave as a single-pole system, making it even more difficult for simple EQ to reduce ringing.
Sure, but in this case the ringing is added electrically by the EQ....And in this case it's the speaker that rings. But that's not the same as a room adding ringing at non-modal frequencies which is what I thought you said earlier.
Aw c'mon, why should that stop either of us?
I've already asked you REPEATEDLY to provide your definition of standing wave, which you REPEATEDLY failed to do
There's a book called "The Master Handbook of Acoustics written by F. Alton Everest.
I'm sure your library of acoustics textbooks is vastly larger than mine
I don't know anything about electrical engineering.
This is very interesting, but it's not like "all the ringing comes back" at the equalized modal frequency, which is what you originally wrote. Some of the ringing comes back as the amplitude increases, but hardly "all the ringing comes back." There can even be new ringing at different frequencies compared to the old position.
I never claimed that EQ could make the response flat or the same for both ears at the same time. These are straw men arguments
Again, the "ringing" is not modal but rather seems to be primarily a function of amplitude.
Because I'm tired of discussing this. I will leave the last word to you, unless you specify that you would like me to comment further. For everyone else, peace, and happy listening.
This is exactly why I raised the issue in the acoustics newsgroup I linked to. Not all acousticians agree on this, though I believe the current prevailing wisdom agrees with my view for all the reason's I've stated.