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Sebrof,I looked at the pics in your gallery. looks like you sit near field? If there is room boundary behind your seat, my guess is you may have to adjust your listening position to compinsate for the suckout. if those single driver full range beauties are your primary speaker I might wonder if floor bounce is a problem? in my expierence woofers mounted closer to the floor tend to be bothered less by "floor bounce" cancellation and peaks (Roy Allison did a lot of work in that area). One possible weakness with single driver designs I'm afraid. The best place for a midrange and tweeter is not always the best place for smooth bass response from a woofer.However, I'll bet the imaging from that design is very good
To Sebrof, from the new insights brought forth by nickd...is your driver located at the 25% mark vertically?
Have you played around with the listening position. A few feet forward and back can swing my bass suckout by 5 dB or so
Sebrof, If the mic was ~21" from rear wall when the center freq of null was 160Hz...that is the cancellation off rear wall.My likely cause of 125Hz is the vertical placement. if you try with speaker ~30-40% above floor and the dip changes or smooths, then the speaker excitation of vertical mode is a prime culprit. Your speaker type actually helps narrow down the range of offenders.
Sebrof, Could you post a plan view of your room with basic features noted (doors, windows, clg height...etc). basic construction types of walls, floor and ceiling...also note where your speakers and ears are located. I will be glad to do some predictive analysis that might help better understand the 125Hz zone without you going on endless measurement searches.I would also suggest that you cross the bridge toward a measurement software platform such as REW, ARTA, etc...Being that you're an engineer I really think you'll enjoy the ability to look at the time domain as well as better resolution of the frequency domain.
While not related to the null, sitting next to a boundary like that is putting you in a pretty bad place due to bass build up near the boundary. I think you'll find that moving forward and listening more nearfield will give you a much better presentation, better imaging, less masking of imaging cues and harmonic structure/micro-details, etc.Bryan
per my earlier comments, these are the two set-up's i'd definitely be trying, if it were my room:doug s.
I'm with ya' Doug. It's just that...man that's a lot of work. Are you suggesting this for sound/presentation, or specifically to address the suckout?Actually - The 2nd drawing doesn't look like a major overhaul so I might try it today.
Actually - The 2nd drawing doesn't look like a major overhaul so I might try it today.
Did you try with different speakers?
yes, i am wondering this, too. because, tho not as extreme, you still measured a suck-out when measuring them from 2' away...doug s.