Hello brownsfan,
Browns looked good pounding the Jets. And yes, I did buy your old house and yes, I did find that hidden dungeon room you built in the basement. Talk about room treatments, that thing is soundproof! It’s now my kids’ new playroom, thanks.
My system doesn’t really have any major issues, overall it sounds very good. I’m mainly interested in achieving a very palpable, 3D presentation that makes it seem like the musicians are in the room or I’ve been transported to the musical venue. I currently only have this experience on some select very good recordings.
I’m using an 18 TB NAS containing about 20K albums, about half are FLAC ripped CD files and half are hi-rez FLAC and WAV files that range from 24bit/96KHz to DSD and I’m using a Lumin D2 to stream these files. I was thinking I have a decent enough system and enough well recorded music recorded at a high enough resolution that the ’you’re in the room’ quality playback should be a more common occurrence.
My main goal for investing in improving my room’s acoustics is to have more of my music collection provide this ’in the room’ perception. I’m thinking better room acoustics is likely a good method of achieving this. I really enjoy the somewhat elusive experience of a solid and stable 3D soundstage where everything seems and sounds so dynamic, palpable, immediate and real.
Hello larryi and tep,
I agree with you both about approaching room treatments incrementally along with not wanting to over dampen the room through absorption. I’ve been learning that utilizing panels that diffuse or scatter the midrange and treble frequencies while also absorbing the bass below a specified frequency may be the best solution for my dipole speakers and room.
The bass in my room, thanks to deploying four 10" subs in a distributed bass array system, is currently extremely good and I believe there’s still no need for any bass traps in my room.
But I understand that excessive upper bass in a room can mask and negatively effect the important midrange frequencies. I don't hear any excessive bass at any frequencies. However, I've also never ran a spectrum analysis in my room and it's technically possible there's some bass issues effecting higher frequencies that I'm not even aware of. Therefore, I'm hoping a bit of upper bass trapping built-in to some of the newer GIK acoustic diffusor panels won't change my perception that the bass is extremely good in my system/room but, if there are issues, this damping may even improve the sound quality overall. I'm doubtful but realize sometimes you just don't know what you don't know. I'll just call 'em like I hear 'em.
So, I’m currently planning on starting with the following:
Two -4A Alpha Series Bass Trap Diffusor/Absorber )33"x48.5"x2"Rectangle) with 2D Scattering on the front wall one behind each main speaker for diffusion and absorption.
Six--4A Alpha Series Bass Trap Diffusor/Absorber (24"x24"x2" Square) with 2D Scattering, 3 on the front wall above my tv and between my main speakers and 3 on the back wall directly behind my listening chair, all for diffusion and absorption.
I think this is a good targeted quantity to begin with. I’ll audition the results with these and proceed from there.
Thanks you guys,
Tim
Browns looked good pounding the Jets. And yes, I did buy your old house and yes, I did find that hidden dungeon room you built in the basement. Talk about room treatments, that thing is soundproof! It’s now my kids’ new playroom, thanks.
My system doesn’t really have any major issues, overall it sounds very good. I’m mainly interested in achieving a very palpable, 3D presentation that makes it seem like the musicians are in the room or I’ve been transported to the musical venue. I currently only have this experience on some select very good recordings.
I’m using an 18 TB NAS containing about 20K albums, about half are FLAC ripped CD files and half are hi-rez FLAC and WAV files that range from 24bit/96KHz to DSD and I’m using a Lumin D2 to stream these files. I was thinking I have a decent enough system and enough well recorded music recorded at a high enough resolution that the ’you’re in the room’ quality playback should be a more common occurrence.
My main goal for investing in improving my room’s acoustics is to have more of my music collection provide this ’in the room’ perception. I’m thinking better room acoustics is likely a good method of achieving this. I really enjoy the somewhat elusive experience of a solid and stable 3D soundstage where everything seems and sounds so dynamic, palpable, immediate and real.
Hello larryi and tep,
I agree with you both about approaching room treatments incrementally along with not wanting to over dampen the room through absorption. I’ve been learning that utilizing panels that diffuse or scatter the midrange and treble frequencies while also absorbing the bass below a specified frequency may be the best solution for my dipole speakers and room.
The bass in my room, thanks to deploying four 10" subs in a distributed bass array system, is currently extremely good and I believe there’s still no need for any bass traps in my room.
But I understand that excessive upper bass in a room can mask and negatively effect the important midrange frequencies. I don't hear any excessive bass at any frequencies. However, I've also never ran a spectrum analysis in my room and it's technically possible there's some bass issues effecting higher frequencies that I'm not even aware of. Therefore, I'm hoping a bit of upper bass trapping built-in to some of the newer GIK acoustic diffusor panels won't change my perception that the bass is extremely good in my system/room but, if there are issues, this damping may even improve the sound quality overall. I'm doubtful but realize sometimes you just don't know what you don't know. I'll just call 'em like I hear 'em.
So, I’m currently planning on starting with the following:
Two -4A Alpha Series Bass Trap Diffusor/Absorber )33"x48.5"x2"Rectangle) with 2D Scattering on the front wall one behind each main speaker for diffusion and absorption.
Six--4A Alpha Series Bass Trap Diffusor/Absorber (24"x24"x2" Square) with 2D Scattering, 3 on the front wall above my tv and between my main speakers and 3 on the back wall directly behind my listening chair, all for diffusion and absorption.
I think this is a good targeted quantity to begin with. I’ll audition the results with these and proceed from there.
Thanks you guys,
Tim