Have you ever looked at the decay times at each seat when the average Q is used? Also, how does one get the room and ears to ignore the tangential and oblique modes?
How does the algorithm work when you have a peak at a frequency in one row and a null in the other row? Proper treatment can help minimize this.
If treatment didn't impact your decay times in the bottom end, then one or more of the following is the issue:
- Treatment not thick enough
- Treatment not placed in the correct places
- Not enough treatment was used to reach the target decay time for that specific room in that specific application
Again, I'm not saying not to use EQ. EQ has it's place. It's one part of properly addressing room acoustics but it can't do it by itself. Heck, I sell treatments and I use EQ - on my sub only. I have 5 parametric bands all set below 50Hz.
Quite honestly, the biggest thing you can do to help yourself in terms of frequency response requires no purchase of treatments or EQ. It's very careful placment of seating, speakers, and sub coupled with proper xover frequency, slope, and phase adjustment.
We can treat and EQ till we're blue in the face but if the sub is in a corner and the seating is slammed against a wall behind it, there's only so much that can be done.
Bryan