Help with 35 year old listening room

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
I need help on my listening room that I made thirty five years ago…

I made it but then due to the WAF it sat mostly as a museum. Now that I am retired I want to tune the acoustics of this space.

With the advent of REW now it has showed modes and other ugly things that would have been theories when I made the room! Life was simpler before I saw the REW output!

I have a Helmholtz resonator back wall that I can bet is not tuned to the right frequency and not using the correct absorbent material… I used 7” of pink insulation back then.

I am using 4 Altec Voice of the Theater cabinets and two Altec 511B horns. There is also a Velodyne ULD-18 subwoofer. The Voice of the Theater cabinets were just updated to use GPA 416-16b woofers.

The Room is 19’x 13’x 7.5’. Two walls are double wall frame construction covered with 5/8” particle board and ½” drywall over the particle board.

The walls behind the Helmholtz and the bookshelves are block.

There is a small room behind the racks and one behind the speakers. The room space behind the speakers is 4’ deep.

The ceiling has Auralex Acoustics 2 inch Wedge Metro Studio Foam Sound Absorption Panels


I saw a web reference indicating that the woofers are “too big” for the room… well if that’s true I sure knocked it out of the park.

I was considering taking some of the Helmholtz wall down and installing a large bass trap… After reading posts from Matthew Poes it sounds like it would be hard to have too much bass absorption. I could take down 8-10’ of the Helmholtz wall and use the space for a trap.

The current wall face is 9” from Styrofoam insulation glued to the outside basement block wall.

My listening position is such that the back of my head is 14” from that Helmholtz wall… if I lean forward it does sound better.

I am uploading the .mdat

Measurement #1, L+R and Sub

Measurement #2, Left and Sub

Measurement #3 Right and Sub

Measurement #4 L+R with Sub turned down all the way, Note though the woofers/amp were driven from the High pass in the Velodyne amp so there is that roll off.


Any input would be appreciated….



Jeff
 

Attachments

  • Weissert 10-13-2018 measurments.mdat
    12.3 MB · Views: 23

Sonnie

Senior Admin
Staff member
Joined
Apr 2, 2017
Messages
5,055
Location
Alabama
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
StormAudio ISP Elite 24 MK3 Processor
Main Amp
McIntosh MC1.25KW Monoblock Amps
Additional Amp
StormAudio PA 16 MK3
Computer Audio
Intel NUC w/ Roon ROCK
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Panasonic UB9000 4K UHD Player (for media discs)
Front Speakers
RTJ 410
Center Channel Speaker
MartinLogan Focus C-18
Front Wide Speakers
JTR Neosis 110HT
Surround Speakers
JTR Neosis 210RT
Surround Back Speakers
JTR Neosis 210RT
Front Height Speakers
JTR Neosis 110HT-SL
Rear Height Speakers
JTR Neosis 110HT-SL
Subwoofers
JTR Captivator 2400 x6
Other Speakers or Equipment
VTI Amp Stands for the Monoblocks
Video Display Device
Sony 98X90L
Remote Control
Universal MX-890
Streaming Equipment
FireCube for movies and Lenova Carbon X1 for Roon
Streaming Subscriptions
Lifetime Roon Subscription
Tidal
qobuz
Netflix
Amazon Prime
Satellite System
Dish Joey 4K
Other Equipment
Zero Surge 8R15W-1 | Salamander Synergy Equipment Stand
Looking at your L+R w/ Sub is the one that I would work with fixing if possible. I am not sure you will be able to do much with room treatments to fix that dip at 100Hz. Have you tried moving the sub around? Adjusting phase on the sub? Adjusted crossover settings?

I think it will be a lot of trial and error, which is about the only way to figure it out short of some sort of correction system like Dirac Live, which would quickly solve your issues.
 

tesseract

Senior Admin
Joined
Nov 12, 2016
Messages
1,266
Location
Lincoln, NE
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Emotiva XMC-1
Main Amp
Emotiva XPA-2 Gen 2
Additional Amp
Emotiva XPA-3 Gen 2
Other Amp
Dayton SA1000
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Sony BDP S590 & Pioneer DV-610AV
Front Speakers
JTR NOESIS 210 RT - L/R mains
Center Channel Speaker
Chase SHO-10 - Center
Surround Speakers
Chase PRO-10 - Surrounds
Subwoofers
Chase VS-18.1 x 2 - Subwoofers
Video Display Device
Vizio E550VL
Streaming Subscriptions
h/k TC35C/Ortofon Super OM10/Pro-Ject Phono Box S
Wow, such a beautiful space! I love the cloud treatment, too.

Sonnie is right, Dirac Live helps so much with room anomalies. I'd block off the Helmholtz resonators to mitigate their contribution, then measure again with REW. Good on you for finding us and REW, we are here to help!
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
Wow, such a beautiful space! I love the cloud treatment, too.

Sonnie is right, Dirac Live helps so much with room anomalies. I'd block off the Helmholtz resonators to mitigate their contribution, then measure again with REW. Good on you for finding us and REW, we are here to help!
So I have tried moving the sub... multiple places not much better... I even put masking tape over the slots on the Helmholtz wall... didn't see much difference on the REW plot... maybe masking tape isn't enough...
I looked at the Dirac Live web page. Is it a software driver, in the end, that would be essentially in series with my JRiver Media center... or anything else playing out my DAC?
I fount the MINI DSP page and saw that I can buy hardware... the DDRC-24 or the DDRC-88A. It would be nice to run the DDRC-88A as and active crossover also but it seems that it is only for 7.1 use.
I am thinking that the room is just too "tight" and the standing waves are killing me... Short of winning a lottery and buying a closed church I don't have too many options...
 
Last edited:

Matthew J Poes

AV Addict
Joined
Oct 18, 2017
Messages
1,903
So I have tried moving the sub... multiple places not much better... I even put masking tape over the slots on the Helmholtz wall... didn't see much difference on the REW plot... maybe masking tape isn't enough...
I looked at the Dirac Live web page. Is it a software driver, in the end, that would be essentially in series with my JRiver Media center... or anything else playing out my DAC?
I fount the MINI DSP page and saw that I can buy hardware... the DDRC-24 or the DDRC-88A. It would be nice to run the DDRC-88A as and active crossover also but it seems that it is only for 7.1 use.
I am thinking that the room is just too "tight" and the standing waves are killing me... Short of winning a lottery and buying a closed church I don't have too many options...

In some ways I think you are right. Particle board, chip board, and OSB are all much more rigid than drywall. Block is even more rigid and fairly dense/heavy. When these exist in the walls of a sound room, it tends to trap more bass in the room. It does sound like your particular construction led to a room with pretty rigid/solid walls. Not good for bass. That doesn’t mean it can’t be fixed (but as others have mentioned, DIRAC will do a lot with a lot less work).

I’m not at my computer to look at your file, I’ll try to look later, but before going too nuts I would try to track down the sources of the various problems. If you measure your rooms dimensions and look at modes, which of the peaks and dips do they align with?

What about SBIR (Speaker boundary interference effects)? Have you tried calculating those?

Beyond that, I would also try turning various compliments on and off (maybe your measurements showed this already?) and see which ones the peaks and dips are most prominent in.

If the prominent 100hz dip shows up in all speakers, it may be a ceiling effect or a length SBIR effect.

Masking tape will have no effect on a Helmholtz resonator trap of the style you seem to have. At LF’s it would not stop it from working, it would actually slightly lower the tune and damp it’s effect, but not stop it.

The insulation you used is likely the perfect insulation. How deep is the panel? Anything over 6” and that is really ideal. My max for the higher density stuff is 8”-10” and only when used as a stand-alone velocity absorber. Otherwise it gets too dense and is less effective than the pink stuff.

If it is thinner, 4”-6”, then I would change it, but it won’t be a night and day difference. A tiny difference at best.
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
In some ways I think you are right. Particle board, chip board, and OSB are all much more rigid than drywall. Block is even more rigid and fairly dense/heavy. When these exist in the walls of a sound room, it tends to trap more bass in the room. It does sound like your particular construction led to a room with pretty rigid/solid walls. Not good for bass. That doesn’t mean it can’t be fixed (but as others have mentioned, DIRAC will do a lot with a lot less work).

I’m not at my computer to look at your file, I’ll try to look later, but before going too nuts I would try to track down the sources of the various problems. If you measure your rooms dimensions and look at modes, which of the peaks and dips do they align with?

What about SBIR (Speaker boundary interference effects)? Have you tried calculating those?

Beyond that, I would also try turning various compliments on and off (maybe your measurements showed this already?) and see which ones the peaks and dips are most prominent in.

If the prominent 100hz dip shows up in all speakers, it may be a ceiling effect or a length SBIR effect.

Masking tape will have no effect on a Helmholtz resonator trap of the style you seem to have. At LF’s it would not stop it from working, it would actually slightly lower the tune and damp it’s effect, but not stop it.

The insulation you used is likely the perfect insulation. How deep is the panel? Anything over 6” and that is really ideal. My max for the higher density stuff is 8”-10” and only when used as a stand-alone velocity absorber. Otherwise it gets too dense and is less effective than the pink stuff.

If it is thinner, 4”-6”, then I would change it, but it won’t be a night and day difference. A tiny difference at best.

The Helmholtz wall is 9.5" from the face of the board to the back wall. As best as I can feel through one hole is around 6" of insulation. The boards are 7" wide and 3/4" thick.

I started some new baseline measurements before I started moving stuff and measuring again but ran into one of the issues that I had before. If I measure the room say 6 times in a row while sitting in the same place and only clicking on the mouse to initiate another run the displayed response varies from run to run below 1K... is that normal? I attached a demo file of 6 runs with differences.
I also ran with the sub and sub-amp high pass bypassed... same 100 hz dip. Not sure if more sub moves are in order. Next idea of a possible point of sub move based on Matthews article on SBIR will be painful on room layout.
 

Attachments

  • 6 Runs with differences 10-18-2018.mdat
    18.4 MB · Views: 10
Last edited:

jtalden

Senior Member
Joined
May 22, 2017
Messages
887
Location
Arizona, USA
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Marantz AV7705 Pre/Pro
Main Amp
VTV 6 chnl NC252MP P-amp x 2
Additional Amp
Behringer DCX2496 x 2
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
OPPO BDP-103 Universal Player
Front Speakers
DIY SEAS H1456/H1212 Spkr x 5
Subwoofers
DIY JBL 2235H 15" SW x 2
Video Display Device
JVC DLA-X790R
Screen
Da-Lite Da-Snap 39105V - 92"
The impulse response looks abnormal for all measurements. This also impacts waterfall, spectrogram and others. I did not see anything in the file that pointed to a reason for the issue. I suggest you investigate to correct this situation before making any decisions on other changes.
jaCapture.JPG
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
Well... the issue was REW was showing corrupt data! It turns out that the Focusrite Scarlett 2I2 driver was not playing nice in the sandbox. It also was causing some issues in JRiver's Media Center...
Focusrite tech support suggested to unload their driver and let Windows use its WASAPI driver... Bingo!
I wonder how Dirac would work with a non AISO driver.
 

DanDan

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Mar 10, 2018
Messages
743
Cool looking room. Dirac is brilliant. I am on Macs and I have never seen a bug or crash. Other systems have options of using Linear or Minimum Phase Filters etc. etc. so I don't quite know why, but Dirac seems to take control of the low end in a very commanding way. But let's park it there, I recommend you leave that till last. I think the Demo period is quite generous.
With rare exception, horn loaded speakers don't do it for me. There are quite a few of the best speakers all looking really similar these days. Soft Dome HF AND MF. I like sealed subs but anything engineered well....
Looking forward to valid .mdats.
Let's consider the ceiling. That foam must be looking a tad tired. But in any case is is way too thin. Generally we would like to see a minimum of 4" fibre, plus 4" air gap. Perhaps not on the whole ceiling, but certainly at least in the usual Cloud location.
DD
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
Cool looking room. Dirac is brilliant. I am on Macs and I have never seen a bug or crash. Other systems have options of using Linear or Minimum Phase Filters etc. etc. so I don't quite know why, but Dirac seems to take control of the low end in a very commanding way. But let's park it there, I recommend you leave that till last. I think the Demo period is quite generous.
With rare exception, horn loaded speakers don't do it for me. There are quite a few of the best speakers all looking really similar these days. Soft Dome HF AND MF. I like sealed subs but anything engineered well....
Looking forward to valid .mdats.
Let's consider the ceiling. That foam must be looking a tad tired. But in any case is is way too thin. Generally we would like to see a minimum of 4" fibre, plus 4" air gap. Perhaps not on the whole ceiling, but certainly at least in the usual Cloud location.
DD
I love horn speakers... super efficient... and therefore less "Doppler". At extreme levels the cones hardly move let alone at regular listening levels.

I though this thread died like a rock in the ocean! Deep and fast!

I uploaded the latest mdat... the foam in the ceiling was replaced a few years ago... the original Sonex was turning into mush!
I tried the Dirac and there was only some HF added... I like the horn curve and find it easy to listen too... when I flatten it out I don't like the sound...
I haven't messed with this for a while... working on rebuilding a HK Citation II for a friend...
 

Attachments

  • 2-7-2019 Jeffco measurment.mdat
    631.7 KB · Views: 13

Matthew J Poes

AV Addict
Joined
Oct 18, 2017
Messages
1,903
I love horn speakers... super efficient... and therefore less "Doppler". At extreme levels the cones hardly move let alone at regular listening levels.

I though this thread died like a rock in the ocean! Deep and fast!

I uploaded the latest mdat... the foam in the ceiling was replaced a few years ago... the original Sonex was turning into mush!
I tried the Dirac and there was only some HF added... I like the horn curve and find it easy to listen too... when I flatten it out I don't like the sound...
I haven't messed with this for a while... working on rebuilding a HK Citation II for a friend...

I'm sorry if we killed your thread. I travel for work and have been on a bit of a speaking tour if you will, so I was out for a bunch of talks and not able to be as active. I'll be disappearing again at the end of the month for about a week or so.

In any case, I just looked at your new file. The impulse looks generally ok to me. Ok I just edited this to remove the comment about distortion. That was caused by the cancelation dips in the response. Sorry about that, I wasn't looking carefully and had it set to normalised. Woops!

There are some acoustic issues in the room too. Decay times are all fine, but there appear to be some strong reflections showing up at 1-2khz. They are strong enough to shift the peak energy curve and look like an acoustic mirror of some kind. Like what happens when you place a speaker against a wall or have some reflecting surface right next to the speaker. Across all frequencies I see this showing up between 3 and 6ms. That reflects a path length difference in the reflections of around 3-6 feet, roughly. If you create a triangle between your speaker, you, and a reflecting surface, what location near your speaker can account for that 3-6ms delay? It may be your offending surface.

As for response curve. I've been reviewing all of the literature on in-room measurements and the relationship between anechoic and in-room. Going beyond what Toole says to get at where these ideas originated and what is known. I realized that some generalizations that Toole made created confusion in the industry. A proper room curve is not only not flat, it is not 1dB per octave rise from 20khz to 20hz. That is the natural rise in a speaker whose free-space measurements are flat and whose DI is flat at 3dB or so. If the DI is elevated from there, the response curve is more tilted. The narrower the dispersion at high frequencies, the more the tilt in-room will be naturally. The room curve that Dirac applies depends on the speaker's directivity. It tries to guess at this, but you can also use your own knowledge of the speaker's directivity to help ensure. What you should never do is try to fight the natural response shape with an artificial curve. A flat response, especially with horns (which are narrow dispersion high DI speakers), because it will actually make a very bright speaker.

I have people argue this point with me a lot and it stems from what has become a huge misunderstanding in the industry. Our ears can filter out early reflections. A microphone cannot. Our ears are directional, they don't hear reflections from certain directions as strongly and they can tell which direction the reflections are coming from. An omnidirectional measurement microphone cannot. When you listen to a speaker, what you hear is mostly the direct sound where the period of the tone is substantially longer than the time delay in the reflections. As the period of the tone and the reflection time become similar, you can't tell the difference so much. A microphone can never tell the difference. A microphone measurement in a room combines all of the sound energy equally from all directions. So a wide dispersion speaker with a flat DI at 0 will actually measure flat in a room. It will also sound flat and neutral. A narrow dispersion speaker whose response is very directional will have a tilted response because at mid and high frequencies the reflections are very down in level, they aren't adding much to the energy in the steady-state response. The LF's still have a lot of room contribution causing a rise in the LF's. Add to that the fact that many directional speakers are also more directional at high frequencies and what you find is that the in-room response of such a speaker is very tilted at high frequencies. However it isn't really that tilted, that is just a function of the direct to reflected energy being captured and combined to create the steady-state response. It is critical that you don't try to compensate for that since that isn't what you hear.
 

DanDan

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Mar 10, 2018
Messages
743
Nice to see action down to and even below 30Hz. My download shows only one Measurement in the .mdat. The mic is very rarely precisely between the two tweeters, so for HF testing it is best to do L only, R only, L+R.
DD
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
I am guessing that the hard polyurethane coated boards of the Helmholtz resonator behind my listening position is the culprit… It is 24" behind the measuring mic and the wall is 10-12" deep behind that surface... I re-did the measurements and propped up a 2'x4' piece of 2" thick auralex (which has a piece of paneling glued to it to keep it straight) behind the measuring mic and against the resonator to compare. If I look or measure from the listening position mic there isn't anything within the 3-6' range except that back wall and the ceiling which is 4' above the mic. The ceiling should absorb mid to highs... as it is squares of the 2" auralex panels. Maybe some absorptive panels should be hung on the back wall... my head is way too close to the wall but unless I move to a different house I am stuck there! Wish that I was younger and could buy a used rural church... a sanctuary would be a great space!
 

Attachments

  • 2-7-2019 Jeffco measurment.mdat
    3.1 MB · Views: 11

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
Yep... after earlier work to check each side was done I have done both together... Other posts told me that it averages some of the acoustical anomalies.
 
Joined
Oct 28, 2017
Messages
33
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Sherbourn preamp
Main Amp
Enlightened Audio Designs Powermaster 1000
Additional Amp
Emotiva UPA-700
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Oppo UDP-203
Front Speakers
RCF monitor 6
Subwoofers
Bag End ELF
Streaming Subscriptions
Yamaha Motif XS
Do you have a picture of your rear wall? I would really like to see that.
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
Here is the back wall.... all the surfaces are in separate pictures attached to the original post...
Thanks for looking...
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
Here is the back wall.... all the surfaces are in separate pictures attached to the original post...
Thanks for looking...
Here is the back wall.... all the surfaces are in separate pictures attached to the original post...
Thanks for looking...
Whoops.... I came back to my PC and found that there was an error uploading the photo of the back wall... its an older picture. I have since removed the pictures hanging on the wall.
 

Attachments

  • P1050572.JPG
    P1050572.JPG
    872.5 KB · Views: 15

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18

Attachments

  • 2-7-2019 Jeffco measurment.mdat
    5.5 MB · Views: 10

Adhoc

Member
Joined
Jan 7, 2018
Messages
28
I cannot open the latest files, -I get a message "the file is not in mdat format".

Nice looking room by the way. If the sofa is the main LP, it would be advantageous if it could be moved at least a meter away (>3+ ft) from the backwall. What Matthew wrote is good info. For location hearing looks to the first direct sound and early reflections from sidewalls do widen the soundstage, -as the speaker’s mirror images are on the other side of the sidewalls. A wider soundstage and added spaciousness can be enjoyful for some of course. Personally I prefer to get added room spaciousness from later lateral reflections (15-30 ms or so) and have no early reflections before that. (I see the widened sound stage from early reflections as a false width, compared to what is actually recorded.)

Penalties from early reflections would also be dips in the frequency curve, especially in the bass and lower midrange and a more blurred positioning of recorded instruments / singer because of the mirror images. Reflections within about the first 5 ms are worse than those arriving later. Check the Haas curve diagram from Sound Systems Engineering, it is very steep between 0-5 ms. From about 6 ms the Haas effect is stronger and reflections need to be about 10 dB stronger compared to the direct sound to change the location. I add a page from Mendel Kleiner's Acoustics in Small Rooms, with some info on ”severeness” of early reflections. As you use REW, you can find out quite easily when and where your reflections are coming from, as well as their strength in dB below the first direct sound. Use the ETC diagrams for this. The third picture show schematically what kind of sound one can expect in the room, depending on treatment (or lack of)
and personal preferences. (I like old Altecs too by the way, Nowadays used as TV speakers in the living room though, 3 x 604-8K. 416-8B + the 811 horn used as surround speakers in the basement hometheater. Main speakers are of another brand.)

Davis & Patronis Sound System Engineneering.JPG Mendel Kleiner Acoustics in Small Rooms chapter 9 - reflections - strengths- audibility.JPG Preferenser för ljudbilden.PNG
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
I cannot open the latest files, -I get a message "the file is not in mdat format".

Nice looking room by the way. If the sofa is the main LP, it would be advantageous if it could be moved at least a meter away (>3+ ft) from the backwall. What Matthew wrote is good info. For location hearing looks to the first direct sound and early reflections from sidewalls do widen the soundstage, -as the speaker’s mirror images are on the other side of the sidewalls. A wider soundstage and added spaciousness can be enjoyful for some of course. Personally I prefer to get added room spaciousness from later lateral reflections (15-30 ms or so) and have no early reflections before that. (I see the widened sound stage from early reflections as a false width, compared to what is actually recorded.)

Penalties from early reflections would also be dips in the frequency curve, especially in the bass and lower midrange and a more blurred positioning of recorded instruments / singer because of the mirror images. Reflections within about the first 5 ms are worse than those arriving later. Check the Haas curve diagram from Sound Systems Engineering, it is very steep between 0-5 ms. From about 6 ms the Haas effect is stronger and reflections need to be about 10 dB stronger compared to the direct sound to change the location. I add a page from Mendel Kleiner's Acoustics in Small Rooms, with some info on ”severeness” of early reflections. As you use REW, you can find out quite easily when and where your reflections are coming from, as well as their strength in dB below the first direct sound. Use the ETC diagrams for this. The third picture show schematically what kind of sound one can expect in the room, depending on treatment (or lack of)
and personal preferences. (I like old Altecs too by the way, Nowadays used as TV speakers in the living room though, 3 x 604-8K. 416-8B + the 811 horn used as surround speakers in the basement hometheater. Main speakers are of another brand.)

View attachment 12430 View attachment 12431 View attachment 12432
I wish I could spare the space to move the couch... in front of it is the Velodyne Subwoofer.. then a chair for the computer desk... and lastly the computer desk... all are as close as they can be. I moved the sub but it seems to be better on REW being if front of the couch... and other places in the room it becomes a stumbling block...
I cannot find the "ETC" reference in REW...
I wonder if I treat the back Helmholtz wall with something hanging on the front face.... to absorb those close reflections....
I have had a bunch of problems uploading files to the AV NIRVANA site with Firefox... I just uploaded one using MS Edge as the browser. Hope that it is readable....
Jeff
 

Attachments

  • 2-7-2019 Jeffco measurment.mdat
    5.5 MB · Views: 13

Bpape

Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2019
Messages
41
Location
Eureka, MO (St. Louis)
If you can't move, then a broadband bass/lower mid type of absorber behind you would be of benefit. 6-8" thick with a damped membrane in front of it so it will work from the bottom up to maybe 125-150 Hz.
 

Jeff Weissert

New Member
Thread Starter
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
17
Location
White Oak, PA.
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Denon PRA 1500
Main Amp
Mcintosh MC 60, modified, SS rectifiers
Additional Amp
Nelson Pass, Amp Camp 1.6 for HF Horns
Other Amp
Velodyne ULD-18 amp
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Denon DCm-340
Front Speakers
Altec Voice of the Theater
Subwoofers
Velodyine ULD-18
I can't believe your timing! Thanks for posting.
I was just going to order GIK Acoustics 242 panels to put behind my couch!!!
I have been noticing that if I lean forward the improvement in the clarity of sound is dramatic.. I even pulled the couch forward so I was uncomfortably close to the sub woofer and it was like day and night!
I am not an expert in interpreting the REW results for the reflections. Matthew indicated that the issue was around 1-2Khz... It looked like the GIK panels would do well there...
What do you think? Remember the back wall is a Helmholtz absorber to begin with.
 

Bpape

Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2019
Messages
41
Location
Eureka, MO (St. Louis)
I would look at something more like 244 or Monster Traps and use the Range Limiter. You're looking to get rid of the bass buildup you're sitting close to. The 242's just won't get low enough.. They'll do 1-2k easily all day long but think broader.
 
Top Bottom