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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
My music room - the echo chamber - please help!
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<blockquote data-quote="perfectionist" data-source="post: 254288" data-attributes="member: 1603"><p>Audiomuze this is one of the most crucial areas as this is where all three of the corners meet. I.E. roof, wall and wall. This has been discussed by Vaughan above.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Lanties if you look at your graph you posted and look at the time coming forward then you will see that your frequencies are playing over and over again in time and this is your first priority. The best way to do this is to make panels of a minimum of 150mm thick to straddle as may corners as possible. By doing it this way you will also begin to flatten out your frequency response. I. E. the peaks and valleys. For you its more about coverage rather than corner chunks as is the case with Audiomuze although he needs some coverage aswell which is why he intends to make a few thick panels and test them in various locations.</p><p></p><p>Also don't forget if you don't add FRK (Foil Re-in forced Kraft paper) to one side then you will absorb your upper frequencies aswell and this is not what you want to do.</p><p></p><p>Looking at your mic placement in the pic, it seems a little high, Did you place it at ear height and where your head would be positioned because sometimes this will change your results.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="perfectionist, post: 254288, member: 1603"] Audiomuze this is one of the most crucial areas as this is where all three of the corners meet. I.E. roof, wall and wall. This has been discussed by Vaughan above. Lanties if you look at your graph you posted and look at the time coming forward then you will see that your frequencies are playing over and over again in time and this is your first priority. The best way to do this is to make panels of a minimum of 150mm thick to straddle as may corners as possible. By doing it this way you will also begin to flatten out your frequency response. I. E. the peaks and valleys. For you its more about coverage rather than corner chunks as is the case with Audiomuze although he needs some coverage aswell which is why he intends to make a few thick panels and test them in various locations. Also don't forget if you don't add FRK (Foil Re-in forced Kraft paper) to one side then you will absorb your upper frequencies aswell and this is not what you want to do. Looking at your mic placement in the pic, it seems a little high, Did you place it at ear height and where your head would be positioned because sometimes this will change your results. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
Acoustics & Room Treatment
My music room - the echo chamber - please help!
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