OK, I took a look at your data, and you have both! You very definitely have an SBIR problem of some type, clearly visible in the sequence of readings with the speaker at different positions. And you also have modal issues, but not quite so serious.Maybe with these you can further comment if this is an SBIR vs Modal issue.
Your "50 Hz null" is modal, and it is at 47.8 Hz. almost exactly where it should be for the 1,0,0 mode (predicted: 48.1 Hz). You are sitting in the null for that mode.
It's interesting that as you move the speaker further from the wall, that null does not change at all! Even at the point where the SBIR issue is pumping massive energy into that frequency, there's still a null. Classic case. Key give away. Even SBIR cannot fill in a modal null. The mode just sucks it all out... The next axial mode in the same direction (2,0,0) is also clearly present as a peak, at about 96 Hz, but because it is a peak (not a null) it DOES get eaten by the SBIR issue when the speaker is in the right place. Text book! And the very next version of the same mode (3,0,0) is right there too, as a null, at about 144 Hz. Right where it should be...
So that's why you were confused: You have both modal and SBIR issues, and even though the SBIR can eat a modal peak, it can't fill in a modal null. A null is a bottomless pit: You can pour all the energy you want into it, and it will have no effect on the null.
So there's your basic issue.
The room is also acoustically dead. The overall decay times are around 100 ms, but for that size room it should be more like 230 ms. So it is over-treated with absorption.
If you set up your speakers and listening position correctly, you might be able to get a slight improvement, but it probably won't be huge. You would also need to do something to liven up the room: it's way too dead like it is. It must be uncomfortable trying to mix in there.
But even if you did all that, it won't solve your problem with the ceiling symmetry. You did not show any tests where you did the Left and Right channels separately as well as together, so I don't have any hard evidence for this, but I strongly suspect that you have rather important differences between left and right response. It would be interesting to see a test like that. But to it at 80 dBC for each speaker (meaning that with both on, you will automatically get 86 dBC, which is the "standard" calibration level)
That makes a lot of sense. It's a much bigger room, so all of the big issues will be down lower. You should be able to get flatter response in there, but it will also need careful setup.One idea was to convert the live room which is 31'L x 19' 2.5"W x 8' 7"H into a control room. Maybe see if it could work as single room for both recording and mixing. Possibly use the "terrible" room as a recording booth.
- Stuart -