Yeh Brad that is a very valid point!
Some horns are symmetrical some have more width than height. That gives narrower spread up and down. And will result in less issues with ceiling and floor first reflection points. That I have experienced.
Eric I would put it like this. As we KNOW that the FIRST bounce (reflection point IS the strongest/highest in dB. Then it more energy (dB) that we can transform to friction with absorbing panels. And 2nd, 3rd reflection, and so on is, each decreasing in energy for each reflection that is done.
So if we only have 2 or 4 panels and want to absorb as much reflections from the room boundaries. Where should we places those few panels to get the most absorption as possible with those few panels? Yes at the strongest one of course.
If we wanted to preserve the side reflections but we wanted to absorb the same amount of dB but only treated the 2nd, 3rd and so on reflection points then we need much more coverage than what just 2 or 4 panels could contribute with.
So we see that first reflection points is giving us most bang per square unit of panel/treatment.
(As for me I want in general listen on what is in the recording and not get the "color" and delay of room boundaries.
The "color" is defined by what material the room boundaries consist of. We know that dry walls and concrete walls reflect different amount of dB for each frequency (frequency response). So we can consider that in a concrete there inside that wall sits a mixing engineer that use litle more level on the bass faders on his console compared to the mixing engineer in the dry wall.
Sorry for that dumb analogy.) :D
Some horns are symmetrical some have more width than height. That gives narrower spread up and down. And will result in less issues with ceiling and floor first reflection points. That I have experienced.
Eric I would put it like this. As we KNOW that the FIRST bounce (reflection point IS the strongest/highest in dB. Then it more energy (dB) that we can transform to friction with absorbing panels. And 2nd, 3rd reflection, and so on is, each decreasing in energy for each reflection that is done.
So if we only have 2 or 4 panels and want to absorb as much reflections from the room boundaries. Where should we places those few panels to get the most absorption as possible with those few panels? Yes at the strongest one of course.
If we wanted to preserve the side reflections but we wanted to absorb the same amount of dB but only treated the 2nd, 3rd and so on reflection points then we need much more coverage than what just 2 or 4 panels could contribute with.
So we see that first reflection points is giving us most bang per square unit of panel/treatment.
(As for me I want in general listen on what is in the recording and not get the "color" and delay of room boundaries.
The "color" is defined by what material the room boundaries consist of. We know that dry walls and concrete walls reflect different amount of dB for each frequency (frequency response). So we can consider that in a concrete there inside that wall sits a mixing engineer that use litle more level on the bass faders on his console compared to the mixing engineer in the dry wall.
Sorry for that dumb analogy.) :D