Well, now here's an interesting thread!
First, we have mtrycrafts:
"Room treatment helps but you should do it with instrumentation capability in hand." I have no idea what this means. If mt is implying that you shouldn't attempt treating a room without some sort of analyzer, then perhaps mt is not aware of the myriad acoustical treatment companies offering free help with this sort of thing - not to mention the
Room Acoustics forum here at Audioholics. Not saying that measuring the room is a bad idea. I am only saying that it is not a prerequisite to treating the room.
Next up, markw:
"so far, (speakers, speaker placement, a VW sized sub, and a box that reigns distruction down on feedback) will not be cured by room treatments. ... Do some listening and, if you feel it's necessary, get some room measurements. ... When that's done, start worrying about fancy room threatments. You may find you don't have to, " I don't know what is cured by loudspeaker selection, their placement, an übersub, and processing, but mark feels it's not room acoustics. OK. Also, most room treatments aren't "fancy," but you certainly may find that you don't need any. (More on that shortly.)
To TLS Guy, it's
Floyd Toole you're think of. But Peter O'Toole was great in
Lawrence of Arabia.
From TLS Guy, this snippet:
"I have been chastised for this view, but I regard room treatments as a balm for serious speaker defects. I have done a lot of location recordings, and I monitored with speakers. Within reason good speakers give a good account of themselves in the most unpromising of acoustic environments. ... I bet I've stepped on a few raw nerves here, but controversy and legitimate civil debate keep these forums interesting." Room treatments are not a "balm" for anything except the sound of the room (and, hence, the sound of a loudspeaker or HT system in that room). They are certainly no panacea for "serious speaker defects." In fact, the opposite is typically the case; room treatments typically make loudspeaker flaws that much more apparent. I agree that good loudspeakers should sound good anywhere. But that's no reason to purposefully ignore the one factor that influences the overall listening experience the most:
The Room. As for stepping on nerves - not mine.
Controversy and legit debate are what I live for in these forums - and especially in this one!
highfihoney says:
"Ive also been saying just that for years,if your system is set up correctly & their are no placement issues, speaker defeciencies or just a bad room then room treatments are not needed." Yes. The sky is blue here, too.
Seriously, most rooms - at least most rooms that people are turning into home theaters, as is often the case around here - are acoustically "bad" in some way.
Back to TLS Guy:
"Don't obsess about the room. See how it sounds. I can tell you one thing the better your speakers, the less you will have to worry about that. Just carpet the floor." Not obsessing is always good advice. But this business about "better" speakers yielding less worries about the room is bunk. Yes, better speakers will sound
better than poor speakers in an untreated room, howsoever one decides to define "better" and "poor." But I can also tell you one thing:
Poor speakers in a treated room can sound WAY better than great speakers in an untreated room.
***********
So what say Savant? I say that #1 on Alamar's list should not be "treat the room," but it should be "
consider the room." The room is the only thing you're more or less stuck with. You're going to put a lot of expensive gear in the room. If you decide going in that you're going to worry about room treatments later, you're making a mistake. Room treatments have
never made a room sound
worse. I would advise that you get all the details together about your room and either contact one of the manufacturers offering free advice, post your room info over at the
Room Acoustics board here at Audioholics, or - if it's within your budget - hire someone to at least give you some basic advice.
It is important to understand a few things:
1. Acoustics is not BS; it's science. Your room will affect the way things sound, whether you want to believe it or not. Whether the room affects your sound for better or worse is ultimately for you to decide, of course. But, in the long run (and IMO), there is far more to be gained from a few thousand spent on room treatments versus, say, an extra few thousand spent on loudspeakers that are already costing a few grand apiece.
2. You may be less-than-convinced that room treatments are necessary. And the gear you buy may sound outstanding in your untreated room. At that point, you may decide with finality that you do not need room treatments. That is fine. IMO, it is unfortunate that you will never hear the full potential of your system.
3. Not every room needs heavy treatments. Sometimes, just a few "bass traps." Sometimes, a couple of diffusers. Sometimes, a panel here or there will do the trick. More often than not, you can greatly benefit from at least a smattering of each of these.
4. Finally, you
are the final judge. If
you are satisfied with the sound of your system in your room, then that is
the end, regardless of the opinions of Savant, or anyone else. All I'm saying is that it doesn't hurt to consider the room - a HUGE factor in the sound your system - up front and with due diligence.
You owe it to your listening experience - for at least the 46% of the time it's movies and music, Alamar - to put
consideration of the room at the top of the list. I'm not saying you should plunk $15K down on a bunch of "bass traps" and diffusers. I am saying that you should at least figure out what your room might need in the way of minimal acoustical treatments. You might set aside some funds for them...and some wall/ceiling space. Down the road, if you don't think you need anything, then you're already set for when the next xBox comes out!
My $0.02. I await the rebuttals.