0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 4404 times.
A good website for you to check out would probably be http://www.audioasylum.com/cgi/etv.mpl?forum=mug. From what I vaguely recall, many Maggie owners seem to advocate diffusion of the rear wave. Some use nothing more than a ficus tree behind each speaker. For his bipolar Orion design, I recall Linkwitz suggesting broadband diffusion on the front wall (behind the speakers), nothing on the side walls, and either absorption on the rear wall or else having the rear wall as far as possible.
What is better, a 'live' room, or a really 'dead' room?
Diffusion behind Maggies can work very well in minimizing comb filtering.
But you need lots of bass trapping around the room, plus absorption at the side-wall and ceiling reflection points. You also need either absorption or diffusion on the rear well behind you.
Then again, I could just be deaf as a post.
Since the large Maggies are line sources you don't need as much (if any) treatment on the floor or ceiling. I have vaulted ceilings in my room and noticed that if I got up on a ladder the reduction of high and mid range signal was very apparent.
I believe the guy that owns that Maggie setup frequents this site. I cannot remember his name though.
Quote from: DustyC on 30 Jan 2009, 04:10 pmSince the large Maggies are line sources you don't need as much (if any) treatment on the floor or ceiling. I have vaulted ceilings in my room and noticed that if I got up on a ladder the reduction of high and mid range signal was very apparent.I can confirm this. The line-source tweeter does not radiate vertically much (if at all). I have three ASC SoundPanels on my ceiling at the FRP and noticed a "slight" benefit, but the side, front, and real walls are a much higher priority.-- Nils
But what about putting bass traps on the room boundaries like where ceiling meetings wall? Bryan