T
Tachead7075
Audioholic
I'm using Tapatalk and have no idea how to see your Sig. Got an imgur link or the like?You can have a look at my living room and there are some REW measurements at the end of the thread. Link is in my signature.
With diffusers like the one in the middle of the speakers in the picture below, is that if you are too close you can hear distortion due to the different wells. For me I can't have them behind me on the back wall (too close), on the ceiling I'm uncertain what they will offer as they work from mids and above while bass is still a problem. The side walls are occupied either by bookshelves or windows.
I'm also a little perplexed as to why people put large diffusers behind front speakers in a stereo system as after a few hundred Hz the speaker will radiate toward the front and not much back. I have scatter plates on my panels on front wall mostly because they look nice
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I haven't got heavily into diffusion yet so this is best answered by others. I would work on bass frequencies first anyway as it sounds like you have more of an issue there. And yes, compromises suck lol. I have a bunch myself and it annoys me every day. Luckily I am going to buy a new house in the next couple of years with a better room acoustically and start building from the ground up based solely on acoustics. I will start with one tower, and amp, and a chair in the room and pick the best placements and go from there.
SBIR. Here, from your supplier. But yes, I think generally bass traps or broad band absorption would be a better choice for this.
Speaker Boundary Interference Response SBIR GIK Acoustics
SBIR is a term to describe how the proximity of a speaker to a hard boundary (wall/ceiling/floor) will change the response, especially in the low end
