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Re: Room acoustics newbie [message #63617 is a reply to message #63610] |
Mon, 02 August 2010 08:17 |
Adveser
Messages: 434 Registered: July 2009 Location: USA
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Illuminati (1st Degree) |
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Where to begin?
*Is the coffee table in front of the sofa? If so, higher frequency sound is bouncing off of it, so get a nice thick cloth to go on top of it.
*Are the speakers toed into the viewer? If not, toe them in where the speakers intersect anywhere from a foot behind you or in front of you. It's a matter of opinion exactly where the intersect takes place at sounding best. While you are there make sure the tweeter is at ear level. I consider that critically important above almost anything.
*You mentioned curtains, if they are the good sound and light proof curtains made for theater rooms, then you are in good shape. Making sure sound can't get to windows is important because glass reflects and refracts sound more than anything. glass and windows are a huge problem that should be dealt with accordingly.
*You don't want bass bouncing off the walls. Anything below the (can't remember the name - Schroder frequency? you know, around 240-280hz) is going to resonate, cause phase cancellation and produce standing waves that lead to "one note bass." The bass should really be filling the room. People keep claiming bass is "omni-directional" which I think is bull****. That said, what do you mean by flat? Like it is coming from one part of the room (the source) only? Typically people do not give speakers the foot or two (!) they need completely off the walls, so that may be an issue. This is probably not a big deal unless the speakers are getting lower than 100hz or so.
*I don't think the hollow walls make any difference at all other than possibly becoming as resonant chamber for sound to get trapped in, which should be inaudible really.
*Yes, carpet on the walls works. Every band known to man at some point trolled around town looking for old carpet and matresses to soundproof and create dry rooms for recording demos. It works.
The key is to create a good balance of things that absorb sound and things that sound can bounce of off. That is what creates great acoustics. Measure the room and make sure there that when the dimensions are divided by each other that you get an irrational number, like a ratio of 1 to 2.65 or whatever.
Look around online. There are some great guides I've read regarding more specific things like speaker placement that might be useful.
For room treatments all I do is cover up the windows and nail a heavy blanket to the back wall myself, assuming there is carpet in there and the dimensions allow no resonate bass frequencies. That is a problem that can be dealt with a lot of ways, but we'll save that for another time.
http://adveser.webs.com/
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Re: Room acoustics newbie [message #63642 is a reply to message #63610] |
Tue, 03 August 2010 17:57 |
Adveser
Messages: 434 Registered: July 2009 Location: USA
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Illuminati (1st Degree) |
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Your welcome. I like discussing audio, so it's really my pleasure.
Sounds like everything is off to a good start, so keep up the good work!
Unless you are using 3-way speakers with a woofer that put out "full range" bass, the space between the speakers and the walls isn't that important, so no need to go that far unless this is the case. It is usually good to limit bass building up behind the speakers. That is to say the closer a 3-way speaker is to the wall the more bass will be present, but it isn't the good kind of clean bass from the speakers, so I always move the speakers away from the walls.
There are far more technical and scientific descriptions online that can tell you what is going on better, so look them up if you want more info.
It seems like the Subwoofer(s) are either underpowered or the crossover (you know, not a physical crossover network, but the frequencies they are putting out) from the main speakers to the subwoofer isn't covering everything. If you tell me some of the specs of the main speakers and the subwoofer, we can go from there.
I was going to say in my last post. If you have the facilities, like a laptop and a microphone, it wouldn't be a bad idea to record the sound and take a look at the frequencies. If you do go that far, we can definitely sort out any of the sound problems and correct them.
Good luck!
http://adveser.webs.com/
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