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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
Big peak in my sound - room resonance?
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<blockquote data-quote="iamgigglz" data-source="post: 1133605" data-attributes="member: 23593"><p>I have a pair of Klipsch R-41PM speakers hooked up to my PC in my office. They're great apart from an annoying boomy peak in the sound. Based on some simple tests with AudMe it appears to be at around 150Hz.</p><p>Do you think this is room resonance? The room is a horror story for sound, being fairly bare and small with a tiled floor. I have a big rug and curtains on one wall but that's about all the damping there is.</p><p></p><p>What would a cost-effective solution be? Everything I've googled points to an EQ device of some sort but that seems to be working <em>with </em>the resonance instead of squashing it which seems wrong. </p><p>Is there a better way?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="iamgigglz, post: 1133605, member: 23593"] I have a pair of Klipsch R-41PM speakers hooked up to my PC in my office. They're great apart from an annoying boomy peak in the sound. Based on some simple tests with AudMe it appears to be at around 150Hz. Do you think this is room resonance? The room is a horror story for sound, being fairly bare and small with a tiled floor. I have a big rug and curtains on one wall but that's about all the damping there is. What would a cost-effective solution be? Everything I've googled points to an EQ device of some sort but that seems to be working [I]with [/I]the resonance instead of squashing it which seems wrong. Is there a better way? [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
Big peak in my sound - room resonance?
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