To jump in again, "I do have room treatments, which reduces the buildup of high frequency reflections, I’ve noticed higher volumes are much more tolerable with a properly treated room. It’s definitely quite loud during the peaks, but no louder than your average commercial cinemas. "
Now that I've got all the audio gear set up about right, I think room treatments is what I'm gonna move on to next. I got a rug last weekend could tell a slightly noticeable difference in the sound - I guess the hard wood floor really was like a ping-pong table for bouncing around those high frequencies. I have MY room in the house that my GF has no say in and I can pretty much do what ever I want. On a side not my girlfriend has still not noticed the Anthem receiver. Thank god she would flip a bi*ch if she found out how much that thing cost. Anyone have any recommendations of affordable brands for acoustical treatments? First I want to get - bass traps, Second - wall and maybe ceiling panels. (got the tools and pretty good with my hands so I'm thinking of DIY project, time permitted)
I came across these which have good reviews but look at that price:
https://www.amazon.com/Auralex-Acoustics-SonoFlat-Absorption-16-Panels/dp/B00114L3DW/ref=sr_1_23?ie=UTF8&qid=1510681572&sr=8-23&keywords=burgundy+acoustic+panel
I’d use the 2” wedgies, they have the best NRC out of the panels and work well above 500hz. Alternatively, you could check out gik or ats and get fiberglass based absorption. Foam wedgies will likely work better in a small room since the angle of incidence to flat panels can cause reflections off the surface of flat panels.
Ceiling panels are more important than wall panels. Whether or not you want to absorb the lateral reflections really depends on the speakers dispersion and the room size/speaker distance to wall. I went with absorption for the lateral reflections because I have a fairly narrow room, and wider controlled directivity speakers placed less than 2’ from the side walls, causing full bandwidth HF reflections that were just too damn loud relative to the direct sound. The panels simply attentuated everything from 500hz on up, giving better focus to the soundstage.
I would start by placing 24”x36”-48” of absorption at the mid point between the front speakers and mlp on the ceiling, and a rug at the same spot on the floor. Assure you tweeters are at ear level or you will be placing the panels in the wrong spot. Grab a tape measure and measure the distance to the seating area. If it’s 10’, for example, the ceiling panel should be placed at 5’ from the speakers in the middle of the ceiling. Do the same with the surrounds.
Rear wall absorption is important if you are closer than 7-10’ from it. I’d just start with ceiling/floor treatments and see how it sounds first. Absorption of lateral reflections isn’t cut and dry, it can either help or harm the sound, depending on the room placement. If my room was wider and I had at least 5’ from the side walls, I’d probably just leave the wall bare. I use t-pins to attach the Auralex panels. No way am I gonna glue that stuff to the wall. This also allows you to experiment with placement. Once you get the ceiling/floor and rear wall, you can try the side walls, you might get good results, or it might sound worse. Since you’re using Klipsch speakers, the directivity should be fairly constant. The further off axis the wall is from the horn, the lower in level the HF reflections will be, since each 15 degree angle off axis drops the level by about 2dB. You really want the reflections to be at least 10dB down below the direct sound. With placement near the wall, the angle of incidence of the early reflections may fall within 45 degrees or even less, and in that case, lateral absorption is helpful. The dispersion pattern should be similar to this
As you can see, at 45 degrees, everything from 1.5khz-14khz is about 6dB down.
You also absolutely do not want a dead room. Just a few panels in some key problem spots is enough.
As far as bass trapping goes, it’s really impractical. To actually get absorption below 100hz requires very thick panels. You’re better off both economically and aesthetically using multiple subs, proper sub placement, seating placement, and eq at low frequencies to solve bass issues.
https://www.amazon.com/Auralex-Acoustics-Studiofoam-Absorption-24-Panels/dp/B0002D05KA?th=1&psc=1
This should be plenty to get started. Don’t cheap out and use off brands, most of them have tested poorly compared to Auralex.
This is a good site for calculating the areas of early reflections
http://www.acoustic.ua/forms/calculator4.en.html
Make sure you measure from the tweeter center, not the baffle edge.
You should re run room correction post treatment as well.
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