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I'm a little curious- all room treatment packs from 8th Nerve to Auralex to Foam by mail all seem to treat the trihedral corners formed by the walls & ceilings. But they all ignore the corners formed by the walls & floor. Why is this? Is there a different force at work here or is it simply for aethetic purposes.The laymen acoustician in me thinks those corners would load the sound just as badly.
8th (what's your name?), I've been doing a lot of measuring lately, and I'm coming to the conclusion that the front and rear wall surfaces and corners of a room are more important to trap than the side walls and corners. This makes sense, since the main wavefront from the speakers travels the length of the room, assuming the speakers face that way.
Rob,> a lot of rooms already have things in the corners & room boundries that would help acoustics (ie furnature, etc) <I don't think furniture will do much. Jeff Szymanski, head acoustician at Auralex, posted some before/after plots a few months ago in another forum showing the low frequency response with and without two large stuffed couches. The difference was not very significant. However, those couches were in the middle of the room. Had they been near the edges, closer to the corners .the large amount of stuffing would probably have had more affect.
Lots of guys I've known do have their listening couch backed right up next to the rear wall. While this might allow the couch to work as a room treatment, that's a lousy spot to choose to do your critical listening!
Well, if you've got a small room it's the most sensible choice. I quite like the rear wall seating location myself. If your space is cavernous then sure, you can move out in the middle, otherwise it feels weird IMO. Getting a decent spread between the speakers almost forces this position in a small room anyway. This is also why I think home theater rear channels are almost totally impractical in most spaces.
At the very least I'd want some potent absorber on the wall right behind my head to mitigate strong reflections from the wall surface.