Thank you very much for the link, Les creative edge.
In the first half of the interview, I didn't hear anything on the subject of speakers, rooms, subwoofers, subwoofer placement, or psychoacoustics that I didn't already know. Not trying to be a smartass, but those are topics I have studied. Now I did learn some of the "why" behind limitations at the microphone end of the chain, and behind the fallacy of pursuing "ideal" room dimensions.
Much of the surround-sound discussion in the second half was EXTREMELY educational to me, as historically I've been a two-channel guy. Toole obviously can teach me a great deal about multichannel, so a few minutes ago I ordered his book. I have you to thank, Les creative edge, for making me aware that Toole's book contains a lot of valuable information I am not familiar with.
Back to the first half of the interview. Fascinating that Todd Welti, whose work I'm familiar with, was actually commissioned by Toole to investigate multisubs. I hadn't appreciated that it was Toole's idea first.
As far as subwoofer configuration goals, Toole apparently places top priority on bass efficiency rather than smoothness, as he prefers four in the corners over four at the wall midpoints. My top priority is smoothness, which comes at the expense of efficiency because destructive interference is the mechanism by which maximum smoothness is achieved.
The comparison I would like to see, but which I don't think anyone has made, is four subs at the midwall locations vs four subs in a thought-out asymmetrical configuration. I bet they both would sound pretty darn good.
Again thank you very much for this discussion and the link, without which I would have continued in my mistaken belief that there probably wasn't much in the book that would be new to me. At some point I wish to become competitive in the home theater sound system marketplace, and Toole's book will be a primary resource.
Duke
In the first half of the interview, I didn't hear anything on the subject of speakers, rooms, subwoofers, subwoofer placement, or psychoacoustics that I didn't already know. Not trying to be a smartass, but those are topics I have studied. Now I did learn some of the "why" behind limitations at the microphone end of the chain, and behind the fallacy of pursuing "ideal" room dimensions.
Much of the surround-sound discussion in the second half was EXTREMELY educational to me, as historically I've been a two-channel guy. Toole obviously can teach me a great deal about multichannel, so a few minutes ago I ordered his book. I have you to thank, Les creative edge, for making me aware that Toole's book contains a lot of valuable information I am not familiar with.
Back to the first half of the interview. Fascinating that Todd Welti, whose work I'm familiar with, was actually commissioned by Toole to investigate multisubs. I hadn't appreciated that it was Toole's idea first.
As far as subwoofer configuration goals, Toole apparently places top priority on bass efficiency rather than smoothness, as he prefers four in the corners over four at the wall midpoints. My top priority is smoothness, which comes at the expense of efficiency because destructive interference is the mechanism by which maximum smoothness is achieved.
The comparison I would like to see, but which I don't think anyone has made, is four subs at the midwall locations vs four subs in a thought-out asymmetrical configuration. I bet they both would sound pretty darn good.
Again thank you very much for this discussion and the link, without which I would have continued in my mistaken belief that there probably wasn't much in the book that would be new to me. At some point I wish to become competitive in the home theater sound system marketplace, and Toole's book will be a primary resource.
Duke