How do I dampen my listening environment?


I finally pulled out the carpet in my music room and restored the original maple flooring. I love the way it looks but with plaster and hardwood, I have a cave-like sonic envirenment. Beyond rugs and carpets, does anyone have ay ideas about developing my room acoustics? I really need to take the bright edge down.
Thanks!
larseand
"12-22-09: Unsound
How big a mirror should one use?"

It should be the same size as you wall. Otherwise how would you know what is missing?

Bob
Please, come on. It needs to be just big enough to see some of the speaker you're working on.
I moved the stereo into a larger room in my home, and along the way, pulled up the carpet, installed a maple hardwood floor, and worried about the same kind of issue. The acoustics were hard, and the last thing I needed was bright, harsh sound. As I walked around, clapping my hands and yelling out, some major sweating over what would come sonically ensued.

Thankfully, the end result is very, very good. In fact, friends would listen to the same system, comment on the sound, and ask what upgrades I'd made at the same time. Only one, the room.

What I did had no planning in regards to the system, just the typical things one would put in a room. As things ended up, I needed no audio related room treatments. As has been mentioned, curtains were the first thing I did. While my curtains are fairly heavy, they aren't anything special. However, I also have a more sheer, gauzy type inside the curtains that show in the room. The combination of both likely takes care of the hard glass surface of the windows. Next, a nice, fairly thick (again, nothing out of the ordinary), wool rug. Mine is about 8' X 11', and I would advise one not to skimp on the size. In addition to providing seating, comfortable furniture did a lot more than I would have expected in helping out the acoustics. Some "unintended" room treatments, such as things to brighten up the room like plants, lamps with large shades, etc. played a role. Finally, flexibility in terms of loudspeaker positioning in the room will always make a major difference, and is likely the one parameter most people are hamstrung by. Thankfully, I had (mostly) total freedom there.

Again, what I feared being horrible, softened up nicely once the room was furnished. Once I hooked everything up, I was more than pleasantly surprised with how things came together.
I said "It should be the same size as you wall. Otherwise how would you know what is missing?"

If the first reflection point is the only point of reflections you are worried about then sure one small mirror will do. But the first reflection is only a small fraction of the reflections we hear. Dont forget to put mirrors on the front wall, rear wall, ceiling and floor! They may be 2nd, 3rd 4th... reflection points but add up much more than one single reflection point.

Bob

Octave Doctor PHP