those plantar bass traps are clever and have a clearly measured affect. I would suggest some more variety in this area, as you know how fickle some people can be.
In fact, Planter Bass Traps are probably our least-selling product. Most people, by the time they finally come to us, understand that real acoustic problems require real solutions. So they've already sorted out the appearance issues in advance. The increase in the number of dedicated rooms also helps the acceptance of real treatment.
My Cathedral Sound Panels eliminated a bass boom in my problem corner just as well as a Lenrd bass trap did.
I bet if you actually measured the response and ringing (boom) you would find that is not the case. Unless you had only one or two LENRDs in which case you had too few of them to do much. So they did work "equally well" because neither did much. I've measured LENRDs too, and while they're not highly effective, they definitely work down to the mid- and high-bass range if you have enough of them. Versus the Cathedral panels that do nothing at any frequency as far as I can tell.
Could the Panels have an effect at let's say 400hz
Doubtful. The data I showed earlier stops at 200 Hz, so I just now loaded those same Before and After files to compare them above 200 Hz. Very little difference, mostly down in the noise.
are you saying that one can use the size of an object and calculate what frequencies it will have an affect on based on that size?
Yes, exactly! This is physics 101. You know - long thick organ pipes are used for low tones, and short skinny pipes for higher tones.
I'm not so sure that all ringing(can we use a more benign word?) is bad.
If something rings like a bell when excited by sound, then ringing is the right word. I can't see how that could ever be a good thing.
where does Paul Klipsch's assertion about objects(hard?) placed in the living room for acoustics fit into this?
No idea as I've never seen that quote. But it's common knowledge that to reduce ambience in a room you use "soft" things, and to increase it you instead use "hard" things.
--Ethan