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Quote from: nyc_paramedic on 23 Jul 2009, 04:16 pmSecond, also consider experimenting with long wall placement of the HT2's. It works beautifully here with my HT2-TL's in a similar (13x17) sized room. If this setup works well in your room it affords you a much wider sound stage. Think panoramic 16:9 versus 4:3.Ok, if I do a long placement and bring the speakers farther away from the front wall as oneinthepipe suggested, I think I will be right against the back wall with the chair which is not optimal. I don't know if 12 feet is enough to work with. How far away from the rear wall is your seating position?
Second, also consider experimenting with long wall placement of the HT2's. It works beautifully here with my HT2-TL's in a similar (13x17) sized room. If this setup works well in your room it affords you a much wider sound stage. Think panoramic 16:9 versus 4:3.
Been researching treatments thanks to all the advice I am getting from you folks. Bass traps and absorption panels are my first priority. I still am learing about diffusers and where to place them. Maybe I won't need them at all?? I can't use tri-traps in the back of the room as there is an entry door and a bathroom door in each corner there. I can hang panels on the doors though. Guess that's my only option there. Should I do bass traps along the whole back wall behind the listening seat?For the front wall, panels behind speakers and tri traps in the corners? The OC703 is 2" thick so do you just use multiple sheets to achieve 6" thickness?Off to lurk in the Acoustics Circle!
In your small room, however, I think that you are going to want a lot of low end absorption.
Seems the general consensus from here and elsewhere that low frequency absorption is a must. I was researching and for low frequencies, the OC705 is a better choice? And also a gap between panel and wall is preferred for low frequencies. Would it be one step better to to have a 2" panel then a 2" X 2" skeleton frame attached to the back perimeter then put on another panel then another 2" X 2" skeleton frame then attach to the wall? That would effectively give 2 separate air gaps 1 1/2" each. Or am I trying to re-invent the wheel and should just make a 4" or 6" panel out of 705?
jazzcat, drop the guys at gik acoustics a line. i think you may be splitting hairs worrying about too much. especially given the excellent diagram, brian will be able to give you a no-nonsense analysis of your room and recommend a straightforward solution.often i think audiophiles worry about the acoustics of the room being good for one speaker and bad for another...personal experience has led me to believe that a good room will make all speakers in it sound better, and a bad room will make them sound worse. 95% of treatment is universally beneficial regardless of the speakers. from a quick look, i'm going to guess he's going to recommend a couple of the tri-traps and a few 242 panels. the good part about gik is they work well, look great, and don't cost an arm and a leg.enjoy!
jazzcat1:Yes, yes, yes. That is going to work out very well. Your HT2-TL will sing in that room.Does the panel behind the rack effect the sound very much? I wonder if the rack doesn't reflect much of the sound that the panel would absorb.
That panel behind the rack is a spare. I just put it there to get it out of the way for now. It's not doing much at all, acoustically speaking.