essence
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- Sep 21, 2019
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So I previously had bass traps on the back corners of my room, one was 150mm, the other 250mm with 600mm~ airgap. They were free standing, and the backwall isn't fully rigid backing hence the actual effectiveness is slightly less than calculated. Having a near field setup in a medium sized room also neglected the measured before and after performance.
Playing around with the modelling calc shows you two important factors, one the more space you have around to play with the better it is to use less dense materials and vice-versa less space means better performance with denser material.
I recently managed to move some stuff in order to fit in front two bass traps of the identical setup and was very astonished at the results;
Top being after and bottom before. 1/12 smoothing no eq. The main issue was with the 90hz room mode null which it completely fixed up. Previously I could fix this with EQ but this reduced my headroom due to preamp by -12.5db where as now I have much better bass response and reducing the load of amplifier considering eq only requires a preamp of only -5db for a fully flat bass response.
Post EQ response, REW + rephase to 200hz:
Downsides of having 4x basstraps of 1.2m x 2.4m x .250m in a 4.6m x 3.8m x 2.5m room means its not very livable, much of the room is essentially absorption. And the aesthetics of plain sheets of insulation is the best but very much worth it compared to the megabucks saved compared to purchasing commercial products.
The room sounds very dead however I am very much in the camp that dead sounds fine, in no way fatiguing and if anything diffusion adds an artificial colouration to the room. (aka makes a small room sounds much larger than it really is.) That said I am still going to try some diffusion at the first reflection points and front/backwalls to see its impact, considering Vicoustic DC2 or maybe some DIY wooden qrd panels.
DIY Basstrap: 250mm of Polymax Absorb XHD on Ikea clothes rack with wooden planks for support:
All in all very happy with the difference room treatment ended up doing for me! The impact could no way be obtained if I spent the equal amount of dollars and effort on say gear purchases.
Playing around with the modelling calc shows you two important factors, one the more space you have around to play with the better it is to use less dense materials and vice-versa less space means better performance with denser material.
I recently managed to move some stuff in order to fit in front two bass traps of the identical setup and was very astonished at the results;
Top being after and bottom before. 1/12 smoothing no eq. The main issue was with the 90hz room mode null which it completely fixed up. Previously I could fix this with EQ but this reduced my headroom due to preamp by -12.5db where as now I have much better bass response and reducing the load of amplifier considering eq only requires a preamp of only -5db for a fully flat bass response.
Post EQ response, REW + rephase to 200hz:
Downsides of having 4x basstraps of 1.2m x 2.4m x .250m in a 4.6m x 3.8m x 2.5m room means its not very livable, much of the room is essentially absorption. And the aesthetics of plain sheets of insulation is the best but very much worth it compared to the megabucks saved compared to purchasing commercial products.
The room sounds very dead however I am very much in the camp that dead sounds fine, in no way fatiguing and if anything diffusion adds an artificial colouration to the room. (aka makes a small room sounds much larger than it really is.) That said I am still going to try some diffusion at the first reflection points and front/backwalls to see its impact, considering Vicoustic DC2 or maybe some DIY wooden qrd panels.
DIY Basstrap: 250mm of Polymax Absorb XHD on Ikea clothes rack with wooden planks for support:
All in all very happy with the difference room treatment ended up doing for me! The impact could no way be obtained if I spent the equal amount of dollars and effort on say gear purchases.