
DukeL
Audioholic Intern
I hate to come across as an immature fanboy, but wow. Look Ma, I'm talkin' with Floyd Toole!!
Shortly before your book came out, in 2007, I built my first "controlled-pattern bipole" loudspeaker, which used fairly narrow-patterned (Geddes-esque) arrays firing both forward and backward. The idea was to get a relatively reflection-free first arrival sound, followed by a generous helping of spectrally-correct reverberant energy after a decent time-delay from bouncing off the front wall, in a crude first approximation of the acoustic goings-on in a small music venue. Not omni... more like dividing up a wide hemispherical pattern into two identical 90-degree patterns and placing them back-to-back, but bipolar instead of dipolar so we can still have bass + decent efficiency. It wasn't the same as adding more channels, but offered improvement (in both timbre and spaciousness) with acceptable tradeoffs given adequate placement, without the exaggerated image width of omnis, in my opinion. And yes I know what they say about opinions (and I have more than one!), but I'll never have direct access to an anechoic chamber or a true double-blind panel of trained listeners.
So anyway when I read your book, among other things I was struck by the information on what the ideal arrival angles are for reflected energy. The fact that 60 degrees off the centerline (30 degrees forward of side-to-side) was ideal really caught me by surprise. So I switched to a different geometry, twisting my bipole so that the second array of drivers fired at the side wall, to get more optimum arrival angles (ballpark about 60 degrees to the left and right of the centerline for a stereo pair). When room dimensions allowed, this offered a worthwhile improvement in my opinion, but it required a wide room or else the imaging was degraded too much, presumably due to insufficient path-length-induced time delay.
Later a friend of mine, James Romeyn, while experimenting with multiple "bookshelf" speakers in various configurations, tried firing the additional drivers up at the ceiling from down near the floor. This seems to work better in most rooms, presumably because the longer time-delay trumped the more ideal arrival direction. Again this isn't a separate channel (a la Atmos), but it's interesting to switch the "late ceiling splash" arrays on and off (while correcting the loudness) to see what the effects are.
The ideal is probably the "twisted bipole" with a long time delay for that 60-degree bounce energy, and maybe I'll try implementing that someday using dedicated speakers with delays and separate amplification. Have you ever tried that, or something similar?
I realize that none of what I describe above was explicitly encouraged by you or your book, but you gave me that little knowledge which then become a dangerous thing. And I have enjoyed the ensuing ride more than you can imagine. Thus far the market hasn't told me that I've built a better mousetrap, but I've sure had fun trying!
Thank you sir.
Duke
I agree that there's room for improvement over normal stereo.Because of the extreme simplicity of stereo (a directionally and spatially deprived format) there are some kinds of recordings that appear to benefit from a bit of added spaciousness. An instrument hard panned L or R is a mono signal, emerging from a tiny point in space - not realistic. We need more channels and loudspeakers. But don't hold your breath. The movie folks figured this out decades ago, but not the music industry.
Shortly before your book came out, in 2007, I built my first "controlled-pattern bipole" loudspeaker, which used fairly narrow-patterned (Geddes-esque) arrays firing both forward and backward. The idea was to get a relatively reflection-free first arrival sound, followed by a generous helping of spectrally-correct reverberant energy after a decent time-delay from bouncing off the front wall, in a crude first approximation of the acoustic goings-on in a small music venue. Not omni... more like dividing up a wide hemispherical pattern into two identical 90-degree patterns and placing them back-to-back, but bipolar instead of dipolar so we can still have bass + decent efficiency. It wasn't the same as adding more channels, but offered improvement (in both timbre and spaciousness) with acceptable tradeoffs given adequate placement, without the exaggerated image width of omnis, in my opinion. And yes I know what they say about opinions (and I have more than one!), but I'll never have direct access to an anechoic chamber or a true double-blind panel of trained listeners.
So anyway when I read your book, among other things I was struck by the information on what the ideal arrival angles are for reflected energy. The fact that 60 degrees off the centerline (30 degrees forward of side-to-side) was ideal really caught me by surprise. So I switched to a different geometry, twisting my bipole so that the second array of drivers fired at the side wall, to get more optimum arrival angles (ballpark about 60 degrees to the left and right of the centerline for a stereo pair). When room dimensions allowed, this offered a worthwhile improvement in my opinion, but it required a wide room or else the imaging was degraded too much, presumably due to insufficient path-length-induced time delay.
Later a friend of mine, James Romeyn, while experimenting with multiple "bookshelf" speakers in various configurations, tried firing the additional drivers up at the ceiling from down near the floor. This seems to work better in most rooms, presumably because the longer time-delay trumped the more ideal arrival direction. Again this isn't a separate channel (a la Atmos), but it's interesting to switch the "late ceiling splash" arrays on and off (while correcting the loudness) to see what the effects are.
The ideal is probably the "twisted bipole" with a long time delay for that 60-degree bounce energy, and maybe I'll try implementing that someday using dedicated speakers with delays and separate amplification. Have you ever tried that, or something similar?
I realize that none of what I describe above was explicitly encouraged by you or your book, but you gave me that little knowledge which then become a dangerous thing. And I have enjoyed the ensuing ride more than you can imagine. Thus far the market hasn't told me that I've built a better mousetrap, but I've sure had fun trying!
Thank you sir.
Duke
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