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These questions and more have come about because of the cool, cheap and accurate measurement products from XTZ Room Analyzer, Room EQ Wizard and Dayton Audio Omnimic. Whist these products allow you to measure your room they do not provide any guidance on how to interpret the results relative to the audiophile situation of two speakers in a room.
OK, thanks, I will look into it more. But I think there may be some diffusion of purpose here. The OP by Nyal says:I think there may be some conflict here in defining a standard for audiophiles vs defining a standard for acousticians. Is that over-analysing it?
Hey John - these were intended to be standards for audiophiles. Not acousticians!
btw on the RC topic - RC Mark II is the standard adopted by CEDIA in CEB-22. Another suitable measurement would be NCB which seems to have more adoption on the pro side of the world. A quick google search will bring up more than you could ever want to know on NCB or RC Mark II, for example, if you don't fall asleep after reading page 2 of this then you are on the path to becoming a Jedi of noise measurement http://www.cavtocci.com/pdf/tocci.pdf
first reflection points. However, what I'm reading here is that early reflections are NOT bad, as long as the spectrum of the reflection is the same.Do I have that right? No need to treat first reflection points, IF your speakers have uniform off axis response?
Hey a light just went on I was looking at ETCs from some measurement files and I was wondering why the AMS doesn't care about "early reflections." It's often said early reflection are bad, and that you have to put absorbers at the first reflection points. However, what I'm reading here is that early reflections are NOT bad, as long as the spectrum of the reflection is the same.Do I have that right? No need to treat first reflection points, IF your speakers have uniform off axis response?
Hi Anand, I think we need to be careful with the terminology - a true monopole also has a uniform off-axis response.
Do I have that right? No need to treat first reflection points, IF your speakers have uniform off axis response?
In his book, Toole argues that first sidewall reflections can increase Apparent Source Width and the perception of spaciousness in a pleasing way for the majority of listeners. However, if the speakers have uneven off-axis response, then these reflections will be "colored" relative to the direct response. Also, this increase in ASW will likely be directly related to less specificity of localization that some listeners prefer or require, i.e. pinpoint localization.
Couple of other comments/questions:1. Why is RT60 not relevant above 4 khz?2. On page 24 the paper says "single figure T60s can be higher for dipoles relative to conventional sources." However, that is the RT60 of the room, i.e. as measured with an omnipole, isn't it? But what most people are going to do is measure with their actual speakers. So if a dipole, then the target for the measured RT60 would be the same - no?3. Same question about frequency response - is consistency above 4 kHz not important?
That is exactly correct John. Which is why 99% feel the need to "treat" their rooms.If the polar response is a disaster, the brain can no longer adapt and "listen through" the room, because the spectrum of the reflections and sound power no longer track the direct field. The room is now the enemy. Since there is no way to "fix" the polar response of their speakers, listeners must resort to "fixing" the room instead.
This is in fact why Dr. Toole developed and endorses his SLM multi-sub approach.