Thanks Davemcc for your feedback. The fact that you mentioned both corner traps and the SMS-1 is ironic given some reading I've been doing of some older threads here at Audioholics. I came across a thread from Jan 2006 involving, among other people, Buckle-Meister, WmAx, Ethan Winer and JohnPM, titled "Phase 2" in which John provides a number of compelling waterfall plots to show the effects of EQ. While the plots are clearly theoretical, since they are way too clean to be empirical, they seem to indicate that an EQ is capable of increasing the decay rate of a resonant node. WHAT!?
Everything that I have ever learned in any physics, engineering, and pro audio classes tells me that EQ and bass traps address nodes in two completely different ways. An EQ directly modifies the audio stimulus and does not affect in any direct way the room node. Conversely, a bass trap exists independently of any particular audio stimulus, but damps the resonance of any given room node.
Take for example a discrete broadband audio pulse introduced into a sound space. An EQ can affect the amplitude of that audio pulse at any given frequency, but nothing more. Once you've launched that acoustic energy into a room, the EQ's job is done and for the rest of the story it is powerless. Once in the space, the acoustic energy will begin to reflect, diffuse, and absorb. Should that space have a node at a given frequency, the acoustic energy at the node frequency will be preserved by way of reinforcing reflections. However even those reinforcing reflections are not 100% so in time even that energy is absorbed.
So here is my level of understanding. An EQ can reduce the amplitude of the acoustic stimulus at the same frequency as the node, so as to provide less excitement of said node. However the rate of decay of that node is governed only by the mechanical physics of the space which exists completely beyond the scope of the EQ. However JohnPM's data seems to indicate that an EQ is capable of changing the rate of decay of the node (acoustic under damped system) WITHOUT producing inverse phase cancelling stimuli. This proposal violates the laws of physics as I understand them. How can an EQ change the rate of decay of a node without either changing one of the variables of an under damped system (which all represent physical characteristics of the space) or introducing precise phase cancelling energy? Am I missing something?