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Re: Thanks for giving the Welti source [message #18590 is a reply to message #18588] Fri, 24 February 2006 15:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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Illuminati (33rd Degree)

The Welti paper documents an exhaustive study that compared many placements, some with few subs, others with a small group and even some with an impossibly large number of subs. The room was measured from various locations, not just a preferred listening spot. The goal was to determine what configurations resulted in the best uniformity throughout the room.

A lot of time must have been spent getting all those measurements, with the numbers of subs, microphones and placement configurations involved.


Re: Sub placement [message #18591 is a reply to message #18589] Fri, 24 February 2006 15:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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Illuminati (33rd Degree)

The main thing the study searched for is placements that provide uniform coverage, i.e. reduction of nulls throughout the room.


decorrelation [message #18592 is a reply to message #18574] Fri, 24 February 2006 16:18 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
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Grand Master
I guess the central question would be something like "what really matters regarding low frequency reproduction, and what's the best way to get it?"

Apparently one thing that matters is the sense of spaciousness that good low frequency reproduction can impart.

I just finished reading a paper entitled "Localization and Image Size Effects for Low Frequency Sound" (118th Convention, May 2005, paper number 6325) that does a little bit of exploration into decorrelated low frequencies. I'm not quite sure of their use of terms, but they're noting that low frequency energy increases the image size (sense of spaciousness, or width of soundstage?) and then studying the effects of single sub vs two subs correlated vs two subs uncorrelated using various corner placement arrangements.

From the data, it looks to me like if you're going to use a single sub in a corner, image size is best served by placing it in a corner behind the listening position.

Two subs almost always outperform one sub in image size, which is not surprising. With two subs, it looks like correlated slightly outperforms uncorrelated, and using the front two corners slightly outperforms using other corners. But in each of these cases the two subs are equidistant from the listener, so none of them really test Earl's proposition.

Another paper I read on the subject, presented by David Griesinger of Lexicon at the May 2005 "acoustical society" meeting in Vancouver, lends greater support to the desirability of decorrelation. From his concluding paragraph:

"Although widely held to be unnecessary or impossible, reproduction of envelopment [sense of large acoustic space] at low frequencies in small rooms can be achieved, particularly with a multi-channel sound system. Successful results depend upon: 1. Having an input recording that includes at least two channels where the reverberation is independently recorded, and thus uncorrelated with the other channels. 2. The presence of independently driven room modes that overlap in such a way that the lateral pressure gradient of one mode combines with the pressure of another. In the case of two channel stereo, the best results usually occur when an asymmetric lateral mode (driven by the difference signal between the loudspeakers) cerates a pressure gradient at the listening position, and a medial mode (usually a front/back mode) supplies the pressure. Ideally both modal systems should be broad enough in frequency that there is substantial frequency overlap, as well as a spatial overlap. Such spatial and frequency overlaps occur in rectangular rooms of various dimensions, but are rare in rooms that are close to square in dimension. Putting the front speakers along the long wall of a small room can be helpful, as can a somewhat asymmetric speaker layout. In many rooms it can be helpful to place the low frequency drivers at the sides of the listening position rather than at the front of the room. Where high Q modes exist it is useful to damp the modes electronically by an inverse filter with precisely the same frequency and Q."

It sounds like Griesner is in favor of decorrelation and asymmetrical subwoofer placement, apparently preferring subwoofers located to the sides of the listening position. I don't think he considered using more than two subs, but I might have missed it as I skipped over some parts.

So the first paper considering only corner placements seemed to lean slightly in favor of correlated low frequencies, while the second which allowed asymmetrical placement anywhere in the room clearly favored uncorrelated bass with asymmetrical placement (though no data tables were given). In both case, I think they were trying to maximize the same quality - "image size" or "envelopment".

Do we trade off anything else that's desirable in pursuing "image size" or "envelopment" though decorrelation?

Duke
Re: Sub placement [message #18593 is a reply to message #18591] Fri, 24 February 2006 16:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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I see. But they did specify their bias for mono-bass irregardless of the studies purpose. I was just wondering if there is some consideration regarding that issue.
I like the model of 5000 subwoofers in the room; no modes there; nosiree!



5000 subwoofers [message #18594 is a reply to message #18593] Fri, 24 February 2006 18:19 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
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Grand Master
Yes it looks like the 5000 subwoofer model is the "holy grail" as far as bass smoothness over a large listening area.

I wonder if there's a better way to approximate the 5000 sub ideal than any of the positioning arrangements tried in the text. Specifically, the modelled and/or tested multi-subwoofer positions all had symmetry (sometimes diagonal), and decorrelation was not used.

Re: decorrelation [message #18595 is a reply to message #18592] Fri, 24 February 2006 19:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Earl Geddes is currently offline  Earl Geddes
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Duke

I was familiar with the Griesinger paper and I saw the other one but have not read it. I am not sure that the term "decorrelation" is always being used here to mean the same thing. Two sources can be uncorrelated without there signals be decorrelated.

Let me read that other paper and get back on this topic.

Although it may not be here since I am getting a little annoyed at all my work being discounted.



Re: 5000 subwoofers [message #18596 is a reply to message #18594] Fri, 24 February 2006 19:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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Here is a very good study done on the integration of multiple subwoofers and the title is:
The Spatial Auditory Display Using Multiple Subwoofers in Two Different Reproduction Environments. They address the correlation and decorrelation effects through extensive testing.
Let me see if I can get the link; it cleared up a lot of this for me although it is very technical.
the more I know, the more I don't know [message #18597 is a reply to message #18595] Fri, 24 February 2006 19:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
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Grand Master
I didn't even realize that "uncorrelated" and "decorrelated" mean two different things.

The world just keeps getting bigger and bigger. Does it ever reach a point where it starts getting smaller again?



Re: the more I know, the more I don't know [message #18598 is a reply to message #18597] Fri, 24 February 2006 21:10 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Earl Geddes is currently offline  Earl Geddes
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Well I don't want you thinking that either. I'm just saying that the authors could mean different things.

Two sources can be SPATIALLY uncorrelated yet have correlated signals applied to them. And they can have uncorrelated signal - ie. time domain and yet be spatially correlated. Mathematically the term correlation means the same thing, but its applied differently and has different implications.

Its hard to explain this without getting into a lot of math - you know five out of four kind of thing.

Re: 5000 subwoofers [message #18609 is a reply to message #18596] Sun, 26 February 2006 19:14 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
Messages: 297
Registered: May 2009
Grand Master
Thanks for posting the link. I just got around to reading it, and a lot went over my head but it sounds to me like the author found that placing the two subs to either side of the listening position was better than placing one in front of and one behind the listening position because the ear could derive spatial information better from laterally placed subs.

At some time in the future I'll have to try that lateral sub placement; for the moment it's not possible in the room that I'm using because of a doorway and a large propane heater.

Duke

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