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Room acoustics has been of interest to me lately. Since I had to move my audio into a smaller upstairs den, I definitely noticed a lot more echo and reflections. The old handclap test sounded pretty bad with some nasty upper-midrange glare/ring. I put up some stuffed animals (for real) on the 2 upper corners, which helped. I still needed first-reflection treatment badly since I was getting a lot of upper-mid ringing.Well, I bought some 2" pyramid acoustic foams (I didn't want to make low-mids to ...
What's the best approach at this point, to retain the smoothness while not giving up transients, decay, and liveliness? ...
We believe that the only way to maintain proper high frequency balance in the room, AND retain a realistic soundstage, the front surface (the part facing the room) MUST be reflective. Otherwise, not only do you overattenuate high frequencies, but you create surfaces in the room that return sound area differently than the rest of the wall surfaces, creating what I refer to as black holes. This is the single most destructive thing that can be done to your soundstage after of course no treatment at all.P ...
you create surfaces in the room that return sound area differently than the rest of the wall surfaces, creating what I refer to as black holes.
Most people forget that 99.9% of all music we listen to is done in a room. We are used to hearing the room interact with our music. When you hear a concert, you hear the space it is in.
When recording live or in a studio, you generally hear much more of the space of the room than the mic does in the case of a live event, and studios are usually heavily overdamped, again resulting in less room sound. I think that in order for us to hear music that sounds natural to us, we NEED the room to contribute. So focus instead on how to reduce the distorted sound and balance the room instead of fighting with it.
... Not to be contentious, but I wasn't aware that you suggested a "reflective" front wall I have a "very" damped (two layers of 3" acoustic wedge foam) front wall and the soundstage is incredible. The frequency balance is very realistic with no "overattenuation" of highs. ...
Not to be contentious, but I wasn't aware that you suggested a "reflective" front wall
I have a "very" damped (two layers of 3" acoustic wedge foam) front wall and the soundstage is incredible. The frequency balance is very realistic with no "overattenuation" of highs.
the soundstage is incredible
The suggestion that the front wall "MUST be reflective", flies in the face of just about every thing I have read and every great system I have heard.
All room surfaces "return" sound differently, based on angular intersection of the soundwaves, surface texture and shape, and distance from the source.
I agree that "sound preference" is ultimatley the most satisfying result we seek, but I might take issue that "creating" rather than "recreating" is a good thing, "IF" our goal is to hear what the original sounded like.
Corners are where all the damage occurs. This is where the interaction between incoming and outgoing sound waves are significantly impacted by the decreased area of equalization available to the air returning from the corners.
But wouldn't 2 layers of 3" foam start to offer some broadband absorption? Sure it'll suck up some treble, but 6" of foam is gonna start to absorb down into the lower midrange and upper bass. Won't it?
An essential part of the problem is that I've never heard someone playing a trumpet in one foot away from the back wall in a 10' X 15' room
Both John and 8thnerve may be right in their assertions depending on the loudspeakers radiation pattern and its location in the room. What 8th nerve may advocating is a more even spectral decay in the treated room.The empirical test for the effectiveness of any room treatment,is an assesment of speech intellegibility and flatness of response at the listening position.
At any rate, the only way to really change the reverberant time of a room is to 1) have some absorption or 2) to make it larger. Or am I missing something? Treating the point of first reflection will improve sound, I know, but I'm talking total RT.