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I still love that room...I tell / show all my friends. They are all sooo jealous that you truly have a man cave. Who would ever think to look up there? Awesome!
Hey K Shep,I'm familiar with the ATS site. I'll be ordering some bags soon to go over some of the 705 that I have. I had a conversation with Steve Deckert of Decware a while back and he gave me an interesting formula for building bass traps. I didn't write it down and can't remember all that he told me( I suffer from CRS "Can't Rember S#!t" !) . Perhaps a note or a phone call to him may help you out. Chris
Hey K Shep,I'm thinking about doing the samething with some 705. What are you going to use to enclose the bass traps with?Thanks,Chris
...Brian...very nice tips!
K Shep, You may find that improving just the corner trapping does not actually do that much in this case (although it can't hurt!). Your room shape itself creates issues in lower mid, typically a very tough to tame resonance peak in transition of upper bass to lower mid region. Then the amount of room volume behind your speakers is large enough to create "secondary space coloration"...simply the lower mid is likely to be cloudy.I would try to address the area right around your left speaker with 4-6" of panels on adjacent wall and behind (both locations). I would then create a couple additional "superchunk" traps and wrap all three sides...to place in between the speakers (a la tube trap concept). Play around with position meaning how close to speakers. I would start by placing them about 3' behind rear of speaker, listen and adjust.There's a fine line in a space like this where improving certain issues expose otherwise masked highly discrete problems. My point in this is for you to make each step in deliberate manner and listen. You may indeed want to keep most of the absorption you have in place. Certainly 703 and 705 outperform foam inch per inch, but foam has excellent qualities taming non-normal incident reflections and this could be very helpful in your room.I look forward to your thoughts and updates.
Any way you could knock out that storage area that's finished off behind the right speaker? I see the biggest issue you're facing as lack of left/right symmetry. Without that section there you could then move your speakers back a bit, maybe right about where the ladder comes through the floor ... and also move your chair forward from the back wall, reducing it's reflection effects and decreasing it's boundary gain.
Or I could just build a new room. (sarcasm)I agree however the room was laid out to fit around can lights (the platform in the room is above existing can lights too). I built the room from scratch in my attic.