In my experience, you absolutely don’t want diffuse sound in a home theater. For music, it might add ambiance to have lots of reflections, but it just ruins the localization and imaging in multichannel. I’ve had it both ways, a “live”, reflective room (bare walls, wood floor, not a ton of absorbing furniture) and the way I have it now (treated moderately, low amount of reflections) and it sounds MUCH better. I’m a fan of controlled directivity, simply because I don’t want to hear the “room” and any reflections I do hear I want to be similar in timbre.
@shadyJ, why wouldn’t a waveguide with a wide dispersion pattern (90 degrees or greater) be a bad idea? In my experience, it works much better because there’s no treble rollof from seat to seat, and the time/intensity trading helps keep the soundstage overhead from collapsing and hotspotting. This is at 8’ high too.
Dolby specs for home theater is a 90x90 pattern from 100hz-10khz. A 90x90 Klipsch speaker, for example, is 90x90 out to 14khz, being -6dB across 1-14khz +-45 degrees. If someone is seat 30 degrees off axis closer to the left top middle, for example, that’s around a 4dB drop, which is significant enough in my experience to completely prevent hotspotting.
Of course, this is simply my experience and opinion.
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