how can I make the back wall transparent?


If this is the wrong place for this topic please move it

My listening room is 11.5 x 15 and my speakers are 3.5 ft from the back wall.

I have spent considerable effort tweaking stuff, to the point where the system sounds very spacious and deep, BUT it still does not sound as spacious as systems with 6-8 ft of free space behind the speakers.

Is there any aesthetically pleasing wall treatment available that would give me that depth without moving the speakers

Taking the wall down is not an option:-)
williewonka
Achieving so much benefit from treatment in the upper 15"-24' of the room is what surprised me the most.

That's the way Peter(Pbnaudio) treated his rear wall; absorption along the entire upper wall. It's even more effective in his case since he has space between his listening position and the wall.

I'd like to do that, but my setup is in a living room.
Lowrider57 - my setup is also in the living room, so the 24"× 60" piece of white vinyl currently supported by two stands is a bit of an eyesore right now.

However, I've just ordered a 92" × 78" vinyl roller blind ($215) that will fit behind the drapes and is almost invisible when retracted. High on the WAF scale :-)

Perhaps you could mount a similar blind with a white valance to "hide" it
-after all, it will be up against the ceiling (retracted) - no one looks up there :-)

If it's a plain wall you could put an outrageous work of art under it to divert peoples attention?

Possibilities are endless :-)

$215 is not the cheapest tweak I've implemented, but it has been the most effective to date.

Even my wife thinks the system now sounds amazing :-)

Cheers
Pani, many thanks for the tip.

Everything you said in your post about energy, sound staging etc... - basically all the benefits you mentioned - is exactly what I am now experiencing.

However, I do have a couple of albums that seem to be a little bass heavy - so once I've determined that it is due to room acoustics and not the actual recording I'll definitely give them a try.

One album - Eric Clapton's "Unplugged" had some seriously bloated low frequency foot tapping going on in my room, which has now subsided to a more realistic level, but it could still do with some more "fine tuning" to get it perfect.

Cheers
Glad to hear the happy ending.

So substitute for determination and trial and error over time when it comes to managing room acoustics. So many ways to skin the cat.