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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
Acoustic Ceiling Tiles
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<blockquote data-quote="Avian" data-source="post: 1088483" data-attributes="member: 19252"><p>If you have carpet, you can leave the ceiling reflective. Those tiles are very dense and thin, so they absorb only a small part of the frequency spectrum. I would advise against ceiling tiles. </p><p></p><p>Rather good thick cut pile carpet and then depending on how alive / dead the room is you can leave the ceiling or do a ?cloud? at the reflection point. Use diffusion if you have enough absorption in total, or absorption if you need more, or if you have a low ceiling or speakers with poor off axis response. </p><p></p><p>Mostly though, if you have a thick carpet, I would leave the ceiling to last and mostly you?ll find you don?t have to touch it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Avian, post: 1088483, member: 19252"] If you have carpet, you can leave the ceiling reflective. Those tiles are very dense and thin, so they absorb only a small part of the frequency spectrum. I would advise against ceiling tiles. Rather good thick cut pile carpet and then depending on how alive / dead the room is you can leave the ceiling or do a ?cloud? at the reflection point. Use diffusion if you have enough absorption in total, or absorption if you need more, or if you have a low ceiling or speakers with poor off axis response. Mostly though, if you have a thick carpet, I would leave the ceiling to last and mostly you?ll find you don?t have to touch it. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
Acoustic Ceiling Tiles
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