Yep! Get a desk that has everything as low down as possible, well away from the direct line between the speaker and your ears.but I guess the monitor shelf/rack space will no doubt play havoc with the acoustics.
Much better!Found this which is a lot more low profile:
It is possible to build your soffits in such a way that you could take them apart and take them with you, if you leave...I like the idea of building soffits but I'm not sure how long we'll be at our current house
That looks very nice, but your rear wall won't be visible at all when the room is finished. It will be completely covered with treatment...The rear wall was going to just be a "timber pallet wall"
Not for the rear wall! You don't want anything highly reflective behind your head. The rear wall is always the source of the most problems in a room, so it needs the most treatment. If you look around the forum, you can see the way that most people treat their rear walls: Large bass traps in the corners, and thick porous absorption across the space in between. It can have some reflective surfaces on it, but because it is behind your head, you have to be careful about that, so that no strong reflections get back to your ears.but I figured it would be more beneficial to make it a big slat resonator (as you probably figured out in the sketchup).
Right, but it's a small room, so it will need a lot of treatment, and most of that will be bass trapping. You can cover some of the insulation in the bass traps with thick plastic before you put the fabric on, and that will help a bit to keep the highs in the room. In fact, you can experiment once the bass traps are in, to see how much plastic covering you need (what percentage of the total bass trap area), where it is better to put that. You could also do some wood slats, but as I mentioned above, you need to be careful where you place those, to avoid strong reflections.I don't want to kill the room too much either with all the trapping going in.
Also, take into account that objects tend to reflect sound waves whose wavelength is comparable to the dimensions of the object, or smaller. So for example a wood slat 12" wide will tend to reflect frequencies above about 1200 Hz, but a slat 3" wide will reflect mostly above about 5 kHz. So you can sort of "tune" the response of the rear wall, if you need to.
- Stuart -