The mystery of good acoustics


As any knowledgeable audiophile will tell you, the room should be regarded as an essential “component” in one’s audio system. Jim Smith’s useful book Get Better Sound is dedicated to this maxim, as are two long chapters (14 and 15) in Robert Harley’s otherwise consumerist manifesto The Complete Guide to High-End Audio (for a review of the latter book, see my post to this site titled “Audiophile virtues”). And there are internet sites to help you determine the best parameters. Here are two: the amroc room mode calculator (https://amcoustics.com/tools/amroc?l=26&w=20&h=13&ft=true&r60=0.6) and the Cardas Speaker Placement calculator (http://www.cardas.com/room_setup_calculators.php).

And yet, acoustics, not to mention psychoacoustics, remains mostly a mystery. In 1969, when the reconstruction needed to fix the jinxed acoustics of Lincoln Center was finally completed, the great music critic Harold Schonberg wrote in the Times: “Acousticians grimly shake their heads when they talk about it. The cause of their science had been set back a century. Science? After the opening of Philharmonic Hall, on Sept. 23, 1962…the feeling in lay circles was that the ‘science’ of acoustics had as much validity as a prediction by a Delphic oracle or an astrologer in a tabloid newspaper.” The top acousticians in the world had spent years analyzing the world’s best concert halls, and yet the fruits of their labors and expertise had fallen, well, flat in New York. Why?

Why are Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw (1888) and Vienna’s Musikverein (1870) so blessed? Every seat in both of those houses is a good seat acoustically: subtle details are always audible without loud climaxes being shrieky or overwhelming; voices and instruments sound natural; orchestral balance manages to be right even dramatically “off axis,” and so on. The “science” of acoustics was primitive at best in the nineteenth century, and yet, despite the inevitable progress any science makes over time, no one really understands the magic of either of those venues sufficiently to recreate it today.

Let me offer two anecdotes that bring this mystery home to me personally. A dozen years ago, I visited a former student, and a fellow audiophile, who had become wealthy in computer engineering. At that time, he was living in a house his company had rented for him in Sacramento: architecturally undistinguished, it had a large living room with somewhat peculiar geometry and high cathedral ceilings. His system sounded fantastic in that room; the best I’d ever heard by that point in my experience with high-end audio. Then, the following year, he moved into a loft apartment in San Francisco’s Noe Valley. It, too, was large, with high ceilings, but it was almost cube-like in shape; he brought that same superlative system along with him. But in the new space, the same system sounded only passable, not exciting. Why?

My own system was mostly assembled before I moved from a simple cookie-cutter house to my present abode. In the former house, I had no complaints—but I had no idea what I was missing. In my present living room, the same components compare very favorably with systems costing more than ten times as much owned by fellow members of our local audio club. It’s simply a different, and vastly better, “system” than it was before, although it contains the same components. Again: why?

Remember the lesson of Lincoln Center before you rush to a confident answer. Jim Smith, with all his experience setting up systems for well-heeled audiophiles, doesn’t know the answer if the best in the business hired by New York’s cultural powers-that-were did not. So I don’t know the answer, and neither do you; room calculators, diffusers, and bass traps will only get you so far. Maybe this is a good thing; it keeps us experimenting, gives us perpetual hope for improvement. Maybe it also explains, in part, why so few audiophiles spend nearly as much time discussing room acoustics as they do obsessing over tubes vs. solid state, or power cords, or whatever else money can buy that might, just might, improve their sound without actually changing where they live.

But I have a theory.

First, prefer odd room geometry if you can. This claim is anecdotal, not dogmatic; if you have a different opinion, let’s hear it. But it’s my impression that odd geometry corresponds more reliably with good sound. Perhaps this is because the effects of one part of an irregularly shaped room will not be exaggerated, or cancelled, by the same effects produced by a mirror image on the other side. Anthony Grimani, of Grimani Systems, suggests that odd dimensions help to reduce standing waves. Placing your speakers at different distances from the side walls may also help, for the same reasons: whatever resonances are set up on one side will not be exacerbated by the other stereo channel, if the two speakers are different distances from their respective side walls. I’m guessing (this is ALL guessing!) that odd dimensions above will also be beneficial. A trapezoidal ceiling will be better than a flat ceiling, for instance. The lesson, if any of this is right, would be that the by far most common arrangement—a rectangular room, with the speakers placed as far out into the room as is practical from one of the short walls, and the listening position also placed as far into the room as possible—is likely to be better than putting your speakers right up against the far wall, your listening chair right up against the opposite wall (leaving the majority of empty space in the room free of audio objects, and therefore more useful for regular domestic purposes)…but it will not be optimal. A simple rectangle is not a good shape for a listening room, if you have an alternative. Again: this is a pure hypothesis, ungrounded in any kind of “science,” but consistent with my admittedly limited experience (see the two personal anecdotes above).

Second, materials. Different materials—dry wall, bricks, bookshelves full of books, furniture made of wood, upholstered furniture, hardwood floors vs. carpet, “acoustic” ceilings (popcorn or tiles) vs. dry wall vs. wood beams…—will absorb and reflect different frequencies, and various resonances and diffractions, in different ways. What’s best? I don’t know. But I don’t recall these parameters being discussed in any of the references I’ve mentioned above, which are specifically addressed to the importance of room acoustics. I’d guess, using the same logic as arrived at irregular geometry, that a mix of different materials is likely to be best.

One thing’s pretty much for sure. A recent post to this site praised the delights of listening outdoors. I was appalled by that post for social reasons. I live on 5 acres, and my nearest neighbor is about a quarter mile away, but still I would never consider subjecting them to my music by playing it outside! Anyway, audio equipment is designed to be listened to in enclosed spaces, not in the out-of-doors. With no reflected sound at all, I can’t believe an audio system can recreate the experience of being in a concert hall, or a jazz club, or any other likely music venue (even Woodstock, or the Hollywood Bowl, have reflecting structures that shape the sound). I’m unwilling even to try this in any case, out of respect for my neighbors.

So: Have you any secrets for maximizing room acoustics? Shape, furnishings, acoustic treatments? Magical devices (e.g., Schumann resonance generators)? Psychopharmaceuticals?

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ozzy62: Yes, of course, you’re absolutely right. And it’s not just the loveseat; the coffee table, too, is an obvious no-no. But I addressed those objections (or rationalized them!) in the narrative. My "system conception" includes the visual aesthetic of the room. It’s not even a matter of WAF; I want my listening environment to be as appealing to the eye as possible. And we do use that room for other things than listening to music.

However, as I also mentioned in the narrative, I have tried moving both loveseat and coffee table to see how much I’d benefit. Yes, the soundstage does open up a bit, as you’d expect. But not all that much. So I mostly live with the compromise. When I’m finicky, I push the coffee table as far away from me as possible; that gets me a little closer to the ideal.

As for the NAD receiver, yes, again I agree: at least in principle, it is the weak link in the system. But, as the narrative explains, I’ve auditioned other amps (in particular, I’ve twice had a friend’s Primare A30.1 integrated amp in place of the NAD for weeks). And I found I actually like the sound of the NAD slightly better! Plus, of course, it has all those other "objective" advantages: a tuner; a first-rate phono stage; tone controls; 150 high current watts (the Teslas are only 88db efficient). I know it seems unlikely that it should sound so good; maybe I’m deceiving myself, or maybe it’s just that I’m used to it. Or maybe there’s that elusive system synergy going on here. But instruments sound like they’re producing music with wind on wood, or horsehair on strings, or...rather than with electrons. What can I say?

I’ll keep it short. I spent 40K on electronics then spent 1500 on room treatments. Had I treated the room first, I could have saved a lot of money.  True story

Recording studio control room designers try to do this all the time. Even within the recording community there's always disagreement on which control room designs with which equipment packages "sound best". Every great studio sounds different but are still considered acoustically accurate environments. There's plenty of information out there about how they go about it, the materials they use, wall and ceiling angles, diffusion and absorption. Read some books on studio design and apply the ideas that fit your room situation. 

Every great studio sounds different but are still considered acoustically accurate environments.

 

I know i may not be believe but in a very controlled room, a single straw with a certain lenght and a specific diameter, on a specific volume tube or bottle located on a specific place in the room will have an audible specific effect...

Then anything in a room create an impact...By virtue of his mechanical properties and acoustical content and location...

Everything...

And you can acoustically design a studio for a general recording engineering use with ANY audio system you will pick after.......

No such studio will sound the same because of the different audio system you can try in it...And because of the variable relation between the specific signature of such and such audio system and the signature of the troom...

You can go further than that...

You can accomodate a specfic room in a general acoustic way for any audio system, but you can use the room acoustically and optimized it for a specific audio system... The sound will be unique and will give to the chosen audio system a way to reach his peak working potential...

Each audio system has already his signature by virtue of his electronic design ...

Then you can create a studio room for ONLY ONE system, and you can creeate your own room for your own actual system...

If you do so the room or the studio will be specifically tuned for one system and will not work so much well in this optimal way for another audio system....

It is what i call tuning a room or controlling a room by active mechanical method, in constrast with only a passive material treatment so good it is...

 

 

But a studio dont necessarily need to be mechanically tuned this way why? ( save if the owner of the studio will be Glen Glould for example 😁 )

Because the mechanical tuning is done by some unique owner with his ears ...And the studio will be run and used by different people with different ears...

It is the reason why there is also a difference between the acoustic optimization of a studio for general use and the acoustic optimization of a small audiophile room for only one owner and the optimization of a small concert hall or a very big one......

The room is yours then only you can tune it...

Each pair of ears must be tuned together so to speak in the same room and must educate themselves and this two ears must pilot and guide the optimization process...

Nothing is more fun and time consuming... Making it esthetical is a challenge that will be more costly ...I could not....

I know that it is not everybody who own a dedicated room, but we all can learn about acoustic and gain the maximum profit from it at a minimal cost and it will ve way more better than throwing money in gear upgrade...

This is the goal of all my posts, inform you of this underestimated fact in audio life where all advertising is about costly upgrade...A deceiving path for most of us with limited amount of money...

I was astounded by acoustic power improvement compared to anything else...

For sure you will need to decrease the electrcal noise floor of your house...Nothing in acoustic can replace this...

You will need to control the system and room vibration , nothing in acoustic will remedy for that...

But nothing will replace acoustic treatment and evem more mechanical room tuning and control for your specific speakers and specific ears...