I have my own system inspired by Captain Beefheart’s drummer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LpHgG4jILa0 I use a pair of XL Depends which are quite effective in absorbing room reflections!
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- 21 posts total
- 21 posts total
I have my own system inspired by Captain Beefheart’s drummer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LpHgG4jILa0 I use a pair of XL Depends which are quite effective in absorbing room reflections! |
Best Capt. B. vid I've seen. *G* Eric, y'know, overall you're one of the most thoughtful posters here on AG...and I really appreciate your presence, but with this suggestion expecting 'us' to not crack wise and get goofy on you....*shrug* I'm pretty 'odd', granted, but I'd stop short on it. If I followed through on your suggestion, my spouse would call the guys with that long-sleeved coat with the straps and buckles...after 35ish years, she's way tolerant of me, but I know when to NOT do 'something'. *L* Room treatments, sure. Bedroom disassembly, Nooooo..... |
@asvjerry Thanks so much. I don’t really mind it, but I do worry so many will pile on and discredit an important idea. The same people who will spend endless quantities on fuses and quantum room purifiers are sometimes exactly the same that refuse to consider room acoustics at all. I think that the pillows on the floor is a really good _experiment_ (not installation) because you can hear a change in tonal balance happen, despite them not being in direct line of reflections. As others have pointed out, the sound we perceive is not like light from a laser beam. How quickly and smoothly different bands in the room decay has a major influence on how we perceive the smoothness of the frequency response. It's a very inexpensive, and temporary (unless you have a very large dog) experiment. :) Best, E |
Absolutely, Eric. Room acoustics do matter...the smaller the room, the larger part they play. At first glance though, the 'pillow project' seems to skate on the edge of WAF and how ones' spouse might react. There's alternatives...borrowing an indoor laundry drying rack and tossing a heavy blanket over it could work just as well and might prove a bit more portable. Not to mention variable in its' 'profile'. 'Omni fan' that I am, room reflections from a pair can make or break the illusion that they create, in some ways much greater than a direct radiating speaker pair. The same hard vs. damping issues exist, but are exhibited in a different way. If one has the luxury of a dedicated space for ones' audio, it becomes a little easier to adjust and control. If not, and the system has to coexist with the normal trappings of a household, or a space of odd dimensions, similar issues rear up. The 'best average' is what one hopes to accomplish.... Creating a 'dead zone' between speakers is an interesting experiment to perform....a 'negative' version of the center channel one sees in AV systems. Breaking the 'merge' of the speaker pairs' 'center' imaging, playing with the effect just because one can just to see what happens can be very instructive. My personal approach is to 'ignore the room' to some degree. I'm running front and rear omnis, creating a sound field that I can control what happens in the center. Room reflections tend to be overwhelmed by the direct radiation within. An odd approach, perhaps, but it does interesting (to me) effects to imaging that can be controlled to some degree.... My 'experiment in progress'...that, and concocting a really nice DIY Walsh. *G* We all have our goals....;) Everyone's got one....mine's just...different. |