As @ebm said.
About to invest in room treatments; GIK, RealTraps, DIY -- what is your experience?
I've seen many people tout GIK on this forum and I'm already communicating with them a bit. I will also reach out to Real Traps and possibly others. I do not feel bound to go with just one company or solution, so if you've mixed and matched, I'm curious about that, too.
Any recent comparisons between these two, or others? Do you have stories of good or not so good products or service? Any comments about the value of competing products? I'm not super handy or have a lot of free time, but DIY is also considered.
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My strongest recommendation goes to acoustic sciences tube traps . https://www.acousticsciences.com/products/tube-trap their products, customer care and approach to your room is beyond compare. I have contacted gik and have stillpoints in my system. IMO the best in this business is asc. I would strongly encourage you to give them a call . Their room treatment makes the room musical not just damp resonance. Had the magico rep come to my house last week, he had only one thing to say “he has never heard the magico m3 sound better than in my room incl his showroom where they r partnered with Boulder electronics “ . All credit to the room treatment by asc. They r worth a phone call . |
6.5 foot ceilings, you have a difficult situation to say the least. Could be very difficult to manage p. Major bass absorption in great magnitudes, not inexpensive. Please don’t make the the mistake of buying anything without knowing what issues you are trying to solve. You need data. Understand your rooms fundamentals regarding 30, 40, 50 cycle responses. All harmonics blossom ( or not ) from there. These fundamentals, if not managed will distort the octaves above. You will never hear the true electronics, speakers that you own. Free education on acoustic fields web site. |
The Stillpoints Aperture is the only acoustical product that will
give you both absorption and diffusion at the first reflection points of
a system. And you want both!
These two statements are in conflict. Define "effective". I am guessing that was an incredible stretch for effective at 40Hz 3. Unevenly control one frequency over another. (This is often the case with traditional room treatments)
Sure, they probably do something. However, where are the performance graphs ... you know like real acoustics companies provide? They don't work equally well at all frequencies, so what do they really do? It is hard to take a companies products seriously when they make such claims. |
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