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This sure sounds like classic speaker/listener interactions with the room and as such, is something that certainly can be made better. George
I am just surprised that (and wonder if it is even possible) for a room to completely cancel out certain frequencies.
The human ear is not very sensitive to low frequency sounds. There is also considerable individual variation in sensitivity and ability to judge by ear the loudness of such tones. At times I felt that bass response in my system was lacking when listening and was surprised to find when I used a sound meter and low frequency sweep as a source that the loudness exceeded 90 dB.Before spending much time on speculation, I suggest you accelerate your plans to purchase a sound meter and use a low frequency sweep as a source which you can download for free. You can get a meter at Radio Shack for $45 which is well worth the investment. Objective data will help you optimize placement of your speakers and determine the need for room treatments.
I hate to say that, but if you are listening at very low levels you need to engage the loudness switch.
funkmonkey - I obviously can't say for certain, but the following comment you made may provide some insight into your situation."For the most part I truly LOVE my HT3s, but 90% of the time, I am unable to crank them up to the volume required to get them to sound their best."Fletcher and Munson did some very interesting studies in the 1930's that showed that human hearing is quite insensitive to bass frequencies at low volumes. In the '70's, many manufacturers installed "loudness" controls in receivers that would boost the bass when volume levels were low. Many people had no idea what this function was actually for and had it engaged all the time.Here is a link to a write up on the issue. http://www.extron.com/company/article.aspx?id=loudnesscontrol_tsIf your HT3's bass response sounds great at higher volumes, your issue may be as simple as this.- Jim
I am 99% certain that it is the room, too. I am just surprised that (and wonder if it is even possible) for a room to completely cancel out certain frequencies and leave others that are very close unaffected (or at least nearly unaffected)
Quote from: funkmonkey on 20 Apr 2009, 04:16 amI am 99% certain that it is the room, too. I am just surprised that (and wonder if it is even possible) for a room to completely cancel out certain frequencies and leave others that are very close unaffected (or at least nearly unaffected)Unfortunately what you speak of is VERY common. Before I EQ'd my subwoofer, I had a huge midbass peak at 55Hz, then a giant dropoff at 63Hz. In-room peaks and valley's can have a very wide or short bandwidth. In other words, they can be very wide or very thin. You have a PM. It's the room - I am 99% certain.
The Song Towers like to be cranked up: at lower volumes they sound very good, but not great. Again, my system, my room: YMMV.
Thanks Nuance, and nyc_paramedic.I hit you back with a PM bud. My pigheadedness won't let me treat the room I am in, as it's an apartment and I am currently looking for a house to get into. When that happens, I already have the go ahead (from the wife) to treat the shit out of it. Most will be DIY but I will take the endorsements for RealTraps to heart.Thanks again,Greg