Free air, tighter bass - snake oil or cheap tweaks?


Usually when we talk about snake oil it's because some one is out to make a buck on the gullible.  In the case of these tweaks I want to recommend I'm not going to make any money, and you may not spend any either, but I find them useful.

Cover your Speakers

I don't know why a modest change in your acoustics can make such a difference but I usually find that covering my speakers adds a lot of air and room ambiance.  I like to use some thick curtains that I've had from a house a long time ago.  Works really well.

Weigh Your Speakers

I don't mean put them on a scale, but put a weight on top.  Of course, this doesn't apply to those with behemoths.  I find this especially useful with lightweight speakers that are on stands or very small footprints.  Think 2-ways, both bookshelf and floor standers.  I think the additional weight resists the tendency of the woofer to move the box back and forth, creating a kind of Doppler distortion in the bass. In some cases I find this tweak can really make a speaker sound tighter and clearer from the mid-bass downwards.

Clean up the Floor

We often pay attention to the walls, but not the floor, especially behind speakers.  I find that room treatment, cushions and blankets here can really cut out hash I didn't know I had. 

erik_squires

Elegance is what one can strive for, limited only by ones' creativity and craft, @vitussl101 ...

Go thee forth and astound, therefor....;)

jayctoy's avatar

jayctoy

3,575 posts

 

Erik my KLH model 9 are covered with cloth I like the sound.My Norh speakers I have applied felt around the tweeter it Works.Putting weight on top of the speakers helps not much.i go to hardware store for that, I think Marigo has weight but expensive.Some like them.

I assume you know that the weight must be properly burned in. Best done with a CD on repeat at low volume for a couple of months.

So, to many I know this sounds like snake oil, but the weight has simple reason for working.  With smaller speakers, especially tall, narrow two-way speakers, the motion of the woofer pushes against the box, potentially causing a rocking back and forth effect.

This varies, of course, based on the height, weight and rigidity of the speaker.  For giant 200 lb rigid speakers there's no possible benefit here.

This does not have to be "tuned" because the issue isn't any one particular resonant frequency but the entire band of the woofer.