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I have been going through the archives, and I have a question regarding absorption/diffusion on the rear wall of my small room (11 1/2' X 13 1/2' X 9'). I currently have a mixture of 4" panels from ATS, and GIK Tri Traps (2 stacked in all of the corners). The recommendation of my speaker builder (Merling TSMs) is to use absorption on the front wall behind the speakers, and at the first two reflection points on the side walls. I was advised to also uses a small amount of absorption on the rear wall directly above my head--since the size/configuration of the room dictates that my couch be against the rear wall. Ideally, with the TSMs, there would be no absorption on the rear wall, so I am wondering if some D1 Diffusors, placed above the absorption panels would be beneficial in taming comb filtering? From what I have been able to ascertain, I would be sitting too close to the wall to benefit from the diffusors, but for the price, I would be willing to give the D1s a try--unless it would be a total waste of money...Thanks in advance for any input!
As funny as it may sound, I'd take at least a Queen sized mattress and place it behind the couch in front of the wall. Cover it with something attractive, and be prepared for a shocking difference (to the better) with your sound. (Make sure it has no plastic cover)Having the couch against the rear wall is devastating to most systems. The only way to begin to hear your systems potential is to use a fairly broad band (mattress) absorber.Having a hard surface reflection so close to the ears (as in right behind them) will alter the sound more than most other problems.May sound like a funny idea, but will "actually sound" remarkable. And if you have a spare bedroom you can "steal" the mattress for a few sessions at no cost.PS; doesn't work with the new Sleep Comfort air mattress systems Thanks!I do have approximately 2' X 8' of absorption right above my head--I am just wondering how diffusion would work on the rest of the wall...
I recall reading that diffusion needs space to sound "normal" if that makes since. So the deeper the diffusion, the farther away you need to be. I think it was something like a foot for every inch of diffusion depth (4 feet for 4" deep diffusors and 6' for 6" deep diffusors....don't quote me, this is just my fuzzy recollection). I was looking for