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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
In room frequency response = sick puppy
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<blockquote data-quote="Norval" data-source="post: 38977" data-attributes="member: 62"><p>Hi Ampdog, below 120Hz bass traps becomes difficult but manageable down to around 60Hz. Below that it becomes a nightmare. I have little experience myself, had to tune a square room to be good for drums. Have a resonating panel in the window, and two midbass traps within the corners. It helps a lot but I need more.</p><p></p><p>It is commonly accepted that you can't have too many LF traps, but be very carefull to damp too much mid and HF. </p><p></p><p>In larger rooms, panel resonators or at various frequencies are recommended, and in smaller rooms 50 to 75mm rigid fibreglass traps space a little away from the wall is said to work well.</p><p></p><p>I had many links, but lost it when my PC got stolen. But there are many pre and post measurements on the web.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Norval, post: 38977, member: 62"] Hi Ampdog, below 120Hz bass traps becomes difficult but manageable down to around 60Hz. Below that it becomes a nightmare. I have little experience myself, had to tune a square room to be good for drums. Have a resonating panel in the window, and two midbass traps within the corners. It helps a lot but I need more. It is commonly accepted that you can't have too many LF traps, but be very carefull to damp too much mid and HF. In larger rooms, panel resonators or at various frequencies are recommended, and in smaller rooms 50 to 75mm rigid fibreglass traps space a little away from the wall is said to work well. I had many links, but lost it when my PC got stolen. But there are many pre and post measurements on the web. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
In room frequency response = sick puppy
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