As one how does plenty of grandstanding myself

> I recently built Speaker Boundary Interference Response (SBIR - the technical term for the "peak/null problems" mentioned above) into a test version of an LF response spreadsheet <
I think it's important to distinguish SBIR and LBIR, where the "L" stands for Listener. These appear similar to be sure, but are not at all the same thing. Wes Lachot explained the key difference a while back over at RO. If anyone cares I can try to track down that thread.
> the modal response still dominates the net response. <
It depends on the frequency. As shown clearly and irrefutably in my "Room Modes Part Deux" threads elsewhere, below about 165 Hz (in my test room) the modal response does indeed dominate. Above that point LBIR dominates. Since others here may not have seen these posts, I reproduce the data again below.


Both graphs show the change in response as the measuring microphone is moved closer to the rear wall, with the graph lines becoming darker as the mike gets closer to that wall. The first graph shows the response below 200 Hz, and the second graph shows what happens above 200 Hz. Note how the peaks and nulls do not shift with the changing "listener" position at low frequencies, but they do shift at higher frequencies. In this room the shift occurs above about 165 Hz.
The reason I insist that modes are a subset of the more general case of acoustic interference is because acoustic interference came first. It occurs outdoors against a single boundary, so you don't even need a room at all. As you close off one wall, then two, and so forth, until the room is completely enclosed, that's when the interference patterns become stronger due to reinforcement within the enclosed space. But simple boundary interference is the basis of all of this - the parent, if you will - and the additional properties of room modes develop only in an enclosed room.
> Modal response and SBIR are mutually exclusive. <
I'd love to hear that explanation!

--Ethan