geof
You are correct about the sound waves. In your room they travel through the air, when they hit the sheetrock they are traveling through a different medium which has a different speed through which those waves travel, then air again 3.5" then the sheetrock again, then into the air again. Lots of moving parts.
I was trying to discover the speed with which air travels through sheet rock but couldn't locate that info. I did find info that suggests that the resonance of sheet rock is about 70 hz which is probably why we hear louder bass on the other side of a wall and why that is so distorted.
I would bet the MDF used in most speakers does much of the same.
You are correct about the sound waves. In your room they travel through the air, when they hit the sheetrock they are traveling through a different medium which has a different speed through which those waves travel, then air again 3.5" then the sheetrock again, then into the air again. Lots of moving parts.
I was trying to discover the speed with which air travels through sheet rock but couldn't locate that info. I did find info that suggests that the resonance of sheet rock is about 70 hz which is probably why we hear louder bass on the other side of a wall and why that is so distorted.
I would bet the MDF used in most speakers does much of the same.