Hard to argue with a statement like that, but maybe what you need to be careful of is 99.99% of people out there have not had the opportunity to listen to music in a well treated room. You and I have and know how great it sounds.
I think 99.99% (or more
) of people out there know exactly what "bad acoustics" sound like. A person does not need a physics degree to know what "bad acoustics" sound like. I have asked many a non-acoustician what they think of the acoustics in a room. The answers I get usually start with, "Pretty good, but..." or "I like the way the room sounds except for..." or (not as uncommon as you'd think) "I think it sounds great in here!"
So your statement could build false hope for someone in thinking it is "as good as it can get" or like you said at the start.
This is similar to Buckeye's "steak dinner" argument above. I seek neither to mislead people, nor to build false hope. But I take issue with attempts to convince someone of their "need" for acoustical treatments when they already believe the room/system to be acoustically exceptional. (Granted, that appears
not to be the case here, with mpompey.) If acoustical treatments were free, I might be even more dedicated to the aforementioned drum-banging. But even the best DIY treatments take time and money to put together. Why put someone through all that effort and cost if they don't think they need the treatments to begin with?
I realize the arguments:
Will the person who already believes they have an exceptional sounding room/system hear a difference after treating the room?
In most cases, yes.
But the often overlooked follow-up to this question is:
Will the same person now believe that the effort and cost of treatment was worth it based on the difference they are hearing?
I think it's important that acoustical professionals (present company included) do their best to gauge a person and try to determine in advance whether this person will (a) benefit from the treatment and (b) believe it to be worth the effort/cost. The answer to (a) will almost always be, "Of course." The answer to (b) is much more complex. Suggesting a boatload of acoustical treatments to a person who is, in the end, unable to arrive at the justification for the effort/cost is equally as bad as under-treating a room for a person who does see the worth. In either case, people will feel like they've been had...
I wouldn't be saying this unless I'd experienced it firsthand on numerous occasions. Once, in particular, a customer who was reluctant to treat his new HT was talked into how much better it would sound by the HT installer. With treatments installed in the room, the customer thought it sounded worse than it had before; he felt like he'd been had. Even after testing the room and illustrating scientifically the "goodness" of the room's sound, he remained unconvinved. Eventually, all treatments were removed and the customer was much relieved to have "good acoustics" back in his HT.
Did I think the guy was wrong?
No.
(Of course, I found it frustrating that he couldn't hear how much better
I thought the room sounded with the treatments...
)
What I do think is that the customer should not have been talked into treatments in the first place.