soffit or not?

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Soundman2020
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by Soundman2020 »

Oh I mean the hard surface of the soffit(baffle i think) that the monitor will be aimedout of. I was not sure if it needed to be a percentage of the wall or multiple of the monitor size or anything.
There's a general rule of thumb that the baffle should be AT LEAST three times wider than the speaker width (assuming vertical mount). In strict reality, it is three times the diameter of the LF driver, but I prefer to use 3 x width of cabinet. So for example if you have a 7" driver and the cabinet is 8" wide, then strictly it should be MORE than 21" wide, but I would recommend MORE than 24" wide. If you can get wider than that, then even better.

Also, do not place your speaker in the center of the baffle: Offset it to one side or the other. I aim for having the speaker at 5/8 of the baffle width, but that often isn't possible. For example, if that would leave you with LESS than one LF driver width between the speaker and the edge of the baffle, then don't do that.

So for example, let's say that you have that hypothetical speaker with 7" driver in an 8" box, and you have enough room to make your baffle 28" wide. 5/8 of that would mean you should have your speaker centered 17.5" from one edge and 10.5" from the other edge. Since the speaker is 8" wide, obviously it goes 4" each side of it's own center-line, so the CENTERLINE of the speaker would be 10.5" from that close edge, meaning that there would only be (10.5 - 4) = 6.5" between the edge of the speaker cabinet and the edge of the baffle. No good, since the driver is 7". So move it back an inch towards the middle. Now it is centered on a point 16.5" from one edge and 11.5" from the other edge. (11.5 - 4) = 7.5". Now you are good. Borderline, but good. I would probably go another 1/2" in that case, and put it 16" from one edge, 12" from the other, so there's 8" between the speaker edge and baffle edge.

In simple terms, try to have at least one "LF driver diameter" of baffle width out to each side of the actual speaker, and more if you can. The more you have, the better it is: more low frequency extension, smoother and tighter bass, more solid and clear stereo image, less artifacts, etc.

Sometimes I see huge speakers soffit mounted where there's a baffle just an inch or two wide on one (or both!) sides of the speaker, and I have to just shake my head.... The entire point of soffit mounting is to emulate an INFINITE baffle as closely as possible: adding an inch to a huge speaker is pretty far from "infinite"!
The rest of that wall (I guess it's actually the front wall, I was thinking from the monitors point of view) I was going to make absorbent cause my room is small and they would almost be apart of a super chunk corner.
Then you would not have an effective soffit mount! The ideal soffit mount extends the front baffle all the way to the side wall!! If you have an edge and a gap there, then you have not removed the "edge diffraction" problem, which is one of the main reasons why you should have a soffit in the first place! You have also not added enough area to the baffle.

Your bass trapping can go above and below the soffit mount itself and even inside part of it. You could do superchunks in those areas, but I normally do hangers, which are very effective, and you have a LOT of space there, actually, in a well designed soffit.

Look around the forum, and do a search for the RFZ concept of room design. You'll see MANY rooms that are designed like that, with soffits that extend all the way out to the walls, often with an extra section that is angled more than the soffit itself, sort of a "wing" on the side of the soffit, that joins the soffit to the wall. Very important!
I assume bigger is better but will add to reflections
Exactly! Yes, and yes! That's exactly what you want: you WANT the soffit to be as big as possible, so that it really DOES create the reflections that you need, and send those in the correct direction....
will add to reflections that bounce back n forth a few times.
Not if you design the room correctly! The entire point of soffit-mounting in an RFZ room is that the front end directs all of the reflections away from the mix position, toward the back half of the side walls, and the rear wall, where they are properly absorbed and/or diffused, to create the low-level reverberant field ("ambiance") that then envelops the room to keep it sounding good, smooth, not tiring, pleasant, and above all, neutral. The entire concept of RFZ is that ALL early reflections are attenuated by at least 20 dB, and arrive at least 20ms after the direct sound, and are diffuse. Soffits and soffit "wings" go a long way to accomplishing that. There's much more to RFZ than that, of course, but that's the basis.

Here's an example of a properly designed and built RFZ-style room : http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... =2&t=20471


- Stuart -
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by JeromyReno »

Soundman2020 wrote: Not if you design the room correctly! The entire point of soffit-mounting in an RFZ room is that the front end directs all of the reflections away from the mix position, toward the back half of the side walls, and the rear wall, where they are properly absorbed and/or diffused, to create the low-level reverberant field ("ambiance") that then envelops the room to keep it sounding good, smooth, not tiring, pleasant, and above all, neutral. The entire concept of RFZ is that ALL early reflections are attenuated by at least 20 dB, and arrive at least 20ms after the direct sound, and are diffuse. Soffits and soffit "wings" go a long way to accomplishing that. There's much more to RFZ than that, of course, but that's the basis.

Here's an example of a properly designed and built RFZ-style room : http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... =2&t=20471


- Stuart -

I like like the idea of rfz more that I do the non Enviroment direction I was originally going in. I notice in a lot of these designs the monitors are in the upper 1 / 3 aimed down at the listening position, I assume this bounces it off more surfaces(floor to rear to celing) so you have more chances to attenuate the energy.

Would there be a down side to keeping the monitors at the lower 1 / 3 room height but angled up a bit, keeping the listener in the monitors usable angle but directing more towards the celing where I would have the most room for absorption. My rear wall is pretty close but I could build a 24~30 deep cloud in the rear celing corner that would have a better chance and taking down 20db

I have been searching the web and haven't come across any pictures or designs like that. I see a lot angled down though.


After looking at these rooms you have built I have completely changed my direction haha, they are amazing and seeing the results in the room response shows how much the extra work pays off. Very very motivational.
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

Wow guys,

Getting some awesome awnsers here!

A question, the front wall space between the 2 soffits should this also be like the baffle verry solid? Verry reflective? Or should i make this absorbant?

The walls behind the soffit do i keep the construction the same as the rest of the walls of the room?
I mean by this completly finish the outer walls and built soffit seperatly within this room?

Are the angles of my current soffit wings ok?

What do you think of making a verry tight closset and mounting this closset on to a plate mounted on vibration silencers , like they use in machinerie.

Would this work similar to the rubber pad approach? And how do i calculate the needed rubber pads or vibration silencers neede for the speaker /closset?

Thanks!

Finally getting somewhere.
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by JeromyReno »

shimmer wrote:Wow guys,

Getting some awesome awnsers here!

A question, the front wall space between the 2 soffits should this also be like the baffle verry solid? Verry reflective? Or should i make this absorbant?
I was just wondering the exact same thing!
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by Soundman2020 »

I like like the idea of rfz more that I do the non Enviroment direction I was originally going in.
Me too! Phillip Newell says a lot of good things, but I'm not with him on some aspects of NER ("Non Environment Room") design. RFZ makes more sense, to me. CID is another interesting option, but I'm not aware of many places actually built like that, except a couple of test rooms at the BBC. So I'm sticking with RFZ style, until something better comes along...
I notice in a lot of these designs the monitors are in the upper 1 / 3 aimed down at the listening position,
In large rooms, yes, some people do that, but I prefer not to. There's a pscyho-acosutical issue that Andre brought to my attention many years ago, and there's also a reflection issue, and comb-filtering issue.

First, the psycho-acoustic thing: Your ears and brain are really good at figuring out directionality in the horizontal plane. So when you are standing out in the open, looking around, and you hear a lion growl, you immediately can identify which direction that came from, and turn the exact opposite way, to run! But if you happen to be looking down at the ground with your head bent over, or up at the sky with your head bent back, at the moment when the lion growls, what do you do naturally? Very fist thing is to get your head back horizontal, and look around at the horizon, waiting for the next growl... Why? Because your ears are only good at determining direction when your head is level and looking at the horizon! If your head is titled up or down, then you CANNOT determine direction accurately! Because of the way your pinna are built (the curly twisty parts of your ear). The pinna are actually critical to determining two things: frequency and direction. They carefully re-direct incoming sound into the "hole" of your ear, and the make very subtle changes in the patterns of sound that your ear can then pick up, and your brain can process, so you can figure out which direction the growl came from, and how close the lion is. If you were looking up or down, then the FIRST thing your brain does is to get your head level and wait for another clue, because it could not determine the direction and frequency very well, with your pinna tilted up or down to the wrong angle! So your brain wants your head level, such that when the next growl comes, it can determine direction and distance accurately, and tell you which way to run. It doesn't want to run yet, because it doesn't know where the lion is. It would have known if your head would have been level, but it wasn't, so it has to wait for better info. It does not want to send you running TOWARDS the lion! :)

So what does that have t do with studios? There's no lions in your studio (I hope!) But there are sound sources, and there are ears. If the sound sources come from above or below the horizon, then your brain has the same "lion problem": it can't determine direction and frequency accurately. And since you sort of do need to know what direction each instrument is panned to in your mix, accurately, it's not a good idea to mount your speakers at a place where your brain has trouble determining direction! Yeah, you could just tilt your head up a bit to look at the speakers, every time you need to do critical listening for panning, or to get a good stereo image, but why do that? You'll end up with a sore neck! Tilt head up to speakers, listen, tilt head down to console, adjust, tilt head up to speakers, listen, tilt head down to console, adjust, tilt head up to speakers, listen, tilt head down to console, adjust, ... yo-yo, ping pong, bounce-bounce, up down... sore neck! Studio design is partly about ergonomics, not just acoustics, structures, HVAC, electrical, etc. And if you have to bounce your head up and down all day like a bobble-head toy on a spring, then that's not such a good thing.

OK, so what's the limit? Well, Andre led me on a long path to find out, may years ago, and I did a lot of research on that, eventually coming to agree with him that 7° is the limit. Your speakers should never be more than 7° above the horizon, meaning that they should never be angled down more than 7°. That's about the limit your ears can take and still get useful, accurate direction and frequency info from your pinna, with your head looking forward and not doing an imitation of a pogo-stick. Some places say 10° is the limit, others as much as 15°, but psycho-acoustics research suggests that 7° is as far as you want to push it. More than that, and you need to bounce your head on a spring.

In a large room, you can achieve that with speakers above the window tilted down, because the mix position is far enough back. But in a small room, it's not possible. However, some people do it anyway: I suppose its out of ignorance, or indifference....

OK that's the first reason.

Next, reflection: The higher you raise your speaker, the more reflections you are sending to your ears, from the surface of the desk/console/DAW! Think of this: If the speaker is directly in front of you at eye height, and the desk is also at eye height in front of you, then you are looking at the desk edge-on, so there are no reflections getting to your ears! You see the edge of the desk in front of you, and beyond that the speakers, in a direct line. So the desk cannot possibly be reflecting anything. Now imagine that you lowered the desk 2 feet (60cm). It's now below your line of sight, and there will be some sound waves from the speaker hitting the top of the desk and getting reflected up again... but they will mostly be hitting your chest, not your head. Your head is out of the direct reflection path, mostly. Now imagine that you raise up the speaker by another two feet, so it is higher than your head, and you tilt it down... now the sound waves are bouncing off the desk, directly into your face. So you have the direct sound hitting your ears, AND ALSO the reflected sound, delayed just a couple of milliseconds, or less. So you have interference, phase cancellation, comb filtering, and its at almost the same level as the direct sound, since it was a hard, clean bounce off the desk (no absorption or diffusion). That totally messes up your perception of the sound! Your brain can't handle that: it needs a delay of at least 20ms between the direct sound and a reflection in order to figure out that it was an "echo". If you don't give your brain that 20ms delay, then it cannot process that the reflection is a reflection: Instead, it thinks that it is hearing a different sound from what really came in, and it had a different frequency response from what it really had, and it came from a different direction than where it really came from! So your brain loses the ability to determine phase, frequency, and directionality.

So add those issues to the first issue (that your brain is already having a hard time figuring out directions due to the pinna problem...), and you can start to see why raised, tilted speakers are not such a great idea in small rooms.

That's the second issue. The third issue is another form of frequency, phase, and comb filter artifacts, and it comes from the console surface. Your console surface is full of knobs, buttons, connectors, angles, meter bridges, dog boxes, cables (and probably half-empty beer cans and 3-day old stale pizza slices too), as well as other nasty things that mess up the way sound waves move over it. That causes several artifacts, starting with a general dip somewhere in the mid-range of the spectrum, and a whole bunch of ups and downs in the same region. If you look at the un-smoothed frequency response graphs for Studio 3, you'll see a tiny bit of that. It's not very pronounced, but it's there. If we move the measurement mic just in front of the desk, all of that goes away, and the curve is ruler-flat. It's one of the consequences you pay for having a large console in front of you. Plus, in Studio 3 the speakers actually are raised up slightly, and tilted down a bit (about 4.3°, to be exact), precisely because we needed to get the speakers above the large dog-box on the back of that console. So there are consequences to doing that, but I tried to minimize them as much as possible, by choosing that angle and the distances very carefully. Rod almost choked when I told he needed to build his soffits to angle his speakers down at 4.3°.... but he did it, accurately.

Right now I'm finishing up the design for a mastering studio where there will be no console at all: there's a desk, but it is small, the top face is very low down, and all of the surfaces are carefully angled to minimize reflections to your head. Mastering studios are even more critical than mixing studios, so this is very important. The customer does not want a large desk with a huge console in front of him, for the same reason: he wants clean, pure, line-of-sight to the speakers, so he hears only direct sound, no reflections or distortions from the desk. His gear will be embedded in the desk, mostly on two slightly angled "wing panels", and the angle is carefully set to minimize this "mid-range roughness" issue.

Excuse the long rant, but it's important to understand this stuff if you want maximum acoustic quality in your room!

So that's the long, involved, convoluted, explanation as to why I don't put speakers high up, tilted down greatly.

In fact, the "standard" correct height for speakers, according to international specs for critical listening rooms, is 120cm above the floor: that's 47.25". The reason? Because that's the height of your ears, while seated! For most people seated comfortably in typical office chairs, the average ear height is 120cm above the floor. So that's where you want your speaker, too!

One thing to be aware of: that's the height of the ACOUSTIC AXIS of the speaker, not the height of the top or bottom of the cabinet, nor of the woofer or tweeter. Most manufacturers publish diagrams of dimensions that show you where the acoustic axis of your speaker is located. For a typical two-way speaker, it will be on the imaginary line that joins the center of the woofer to the center of the tweeter, and much closer to the tweeter than the woofer. That's the point where sound seems to emanate from the speaker. If you close your eyes and listen vary carefully to just one speaker, and you were asked to point to the middle of where the sound is coming from, you would point to the location of the acoustic axis. That's the spot that you want 120cm above the floor.

However, I normally raise the speakers just a bit higher than that, for several reasons. It depends on the speaker, the desk, the room, the treatment, etc., but it might be around 122 to 130cm, give or take a bit. That will still keep your ears on-axis with most speakers, but you do have to be careful.


There's one "secret" I should mention here, though: Often those huge monster speakers you see up high and tilted down, are NOT meant for the engineer at the mix position! They are meant more for the client, sitting way back on the couch, at the rear of the room. They are often aimed at him, and he really is on-axis to them, with less that 7° tilt. Or even if it is more than 7°, it doesn't matter as he can sit there with his head slightly raised as he listens, because he doesn't have to look down at the console all the time to adjust things! He only needs to listen, so he can set there without bouncing his head at all, and he'll get food, clean, sound like that. Often, in that type of studio, the main speakers that the engineer uses are on stands behind the desk, or sometimes (gasp!) on the meter bridge! :shock: which is a terrible place to put them... He might use the raised/tilted mains to get the feel for the full power of the mix every now and then, or to listen for specifics, but mostly he'll mix on another set of speakers. Not always, of course, but quite common.

Would there be a down side to keeping the monitors at the lower 1 / 3 room height but angled up a bit,
Same problem as #1, to a certain extent: pinna, directionality, frequency response, plus the additional issue that the edge of the desk, or the console, or DAW, will probably put your head in an acoustic "shadow": if your ear cannot directly "see" the speaker, with no objects in between, then that's a problem.

My rear wall is pretty close
How close? What are your room dimensions? Where is our head located in that room, with respect to the front and back walls? Where are the speakers located? Draw a diagram for us, and take photos, so we can see your room, to understand the issues.
I have been searching the web and haven't come across any pictures or designs like that.
Right! That's for a good reason! :) Whenever you think up a "new" idea like that, and search all over but don't find any examples, then that's probably because it doesn't work! :) If it did work, someone would have done it, others would have copied it, and someone would have done some research on it. If there are no examples, that usually means someone DID try it, and it was a failure. It's unlikely that you are the first person to ever think of that, although it could happen.
After looking at these rooms you have built I have completely changed my direction, ... they are amazing
Thanks! To me, that sounds like a compliment, so thank you! :oops: And I'm glad that you have learned something from that, and can apply it to your own room.
and seeing the results in the room response shows how much the extra work pays off. Very very motivational.
As the saying goes, "the proof of the pudding is in the eating". Or maybe "put your money where your mouth is"! I can spout off about this stuff all day, but unless there's clear data to back it up, my words are pretty meaningless. If it tests well, and meets the design specs, and customer is happy, then clearly it works! I think the Studio 3 thread has a link to their own website, where there's a lot more info, including a long story about the design and build process. Rod was so happy with his studio that he asked me to write that up for him, and he put it in the website. So go looking for that link, and have fun reading about some of the "behind the scenes" info on how we designed and built that place. Some might find it boring, but you might be able to glean more info from there to use in your place.

A question, the front wall space between the 2 soffits should this also be like the baffle verry solid? Verry reflective? Or should i make this absorbant?
You can do it either way, but I usually prefer to keep it soft and absorptive. Sometimes that isn't possible, such as in this room I designed for a customer in Australia:
BRAUS--Rear-left-to-front-IMG_0261-ENH.JPG

As you can see, there are sliding glass doors in the space between the soffits, leading into the isolation booth, so it's impossible to cover those with insulation! So I had to use other "tricks" to make that acceptable... :)
The walls behind the soffit do i keep the construction the same as the rest of the walls of the room?
I mean by this completly finish the outer walls and built soffit seperatly within this room?
Yes, basically. But I normally do control rooms "inside out", all around, so the front wall actually has the studs facing you (with insulation between them, and the drywall on the other side of the studs, which makes it easier to tie the soffits into the front wall properly.
What do you think of making a verry tight closset and mounting this closset on to a plate mounted on vibration silencers , like they use in machinerie.

Would this work similar to the rubber pad approach?
You could, yes, but you'd still need to tune that to ensure that that resonant frequency is at least an octave below the lowest frequency that the speaker will produce. So you need to calculate that carefully.
And how do i calculate the needed rubber pads or vibration silencers neede for the speaker /closset?
That's a little more complex! The equations are rather involved, and you need to know things like the spring stiffness for the material you will be using, or the Shore hardness, or the resilience, and the weight (mass) of everything that you need to float... The basic equation is:

f= 1/(2 PI) x SQRT (K/N)

Where:

f = the resonant frequency
K = the stiffness of the spring you are using, and
M = the mass of what you are floating

However, there's more to it than that. You also need to take into account the damping, transmissibility, and other things.

There are other ways of calculating this, but it depends on the TYPE of spring you are using. There are differences between steel coiled springs, and rubber pad "springs", that you need to consider: coil springs are linear, for example, but rubber is not. However, rubber has some self-damping properties that steel springs do not. Etc. Damping decreases the amplitude of the vibration ant resonance, so it's a good thing, but it also flattens the Q of the resonance, which is both good and bad, from different points of view. Bad in the sens that it increases transmissibility around the resonant frequency more than dampened springs do, so you need to have a lower resonant frequency.

There's another form of that spring equation that might be helpful:

f= 1/(2 PI) x SQRT (g/Delta)

Where:

f = the resonant frequency
Delta = the static deflection of the spring when loaded down with your speaker (in meters)
g = the gravitational constant (in m/s^^2)

The best thing you can do is to decide on the type of spring that you will use, research all the properties of that type of spring, then use the equations for that type of spring to figure out how thick to make the spring, and how much it needs to be deflected (compressed) in order to provide the correct resonant frequency. I'm a big fan of Sorbothane rubber: I think it's the best stuff out there for floating speakers. Other people prefer EPDM, or Neoprene, or even products like Sylomer, or even natural rubber. All have their advantages and disadvantages, but for the way I do it, Sorbothane gives me the best balance of all factors. And they have software that helps you figure it out! :)

In very general terms, for most materials you are looking for a static deflection of about 10% to 20% of the unloaded spring, but the optimal deflection depends on the actual material.

I wish I could explain it more simply, but springs are strange things....

- Stuart -
shimmer
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

Holy.....

Stuart this is getting crazy dude.

alright, I have been looking @ these equations for weeks now and I just can't wrap my head around it.

I tried the sorbothane calculator and if I understand this right it tell's me to use one sorbothane insulator of 4X4X7(thick) inch for one adam speaker.

or should I use 4 little ones and fill up the cavitie in the box with insuation?

this can' t be right??????? please see calclation pic below.

The things i know are:

lowest frequentie from adam a7X = 42Hz -> octave lower = 21HZ minimum.
Mass = 9,2kg or 20,3lbs per speaker.

the stiffness of sorbothane I can't seem to find anywhere = K ??

so if I understand a verry little bit the resonant freqentie of my design should be 21Hz or lower??

please enlighten me I'm feel like getting nowhere and just want to make music.

Another problem , I live in belgium and can't seem to find sorbothane around here, so I already contacted sorbothane if they ship here. I hope so....

Thanks!
shimmer
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

Hey Stuart,

I was thinking, maybe totally wrong thinking of me bt bare with me my head is spinning right now.

If I make a tight fitted box for the adam a7X make it(the box) heavier and let it rest on one big sorbothane pad.

if i follow the calclator. I guess this could be an idea.????
shimmer
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

Sorbothane just replied.

only on amazon via isolate it.

Lol! just found this smilies and i feel like the donkey/horse! lol! :horse:
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by Soundman2020 »

I tried the sorbothane calculator and if I understand this right it tell's me to use one sorbothane insulator of 4X4X7(thick) inch for one adam speaker.

this can' t be right??????? please see calclation pic below.
Correct! It can't be right...
The things i know are:

lowest frequentie from adam a7X = 42Hz -> octave lower = 21HZ minimum.
Mass = 9,2kg or 20,3lbs per speaker.
So if the speaker weighs 21 lbs, and you plan to have it resting on FOUR PADS (!) then each pad will only have 1/4 the total weight resting on it. So it would be something like this:
shimmer-sorb-calc.jpg
Resonant frequency is below 21 Hz, isolation at 42 Hz is 42%. Pretty reasonable.
Sorbothane just replied. : only on amazon
Or ebay : https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R ... e&_sacat=0 Several sellers there...


- Stuart -
shimmer
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

Ok I get the idea,

didn't think I needed only 4 sotbothane pads of 1 inch to achieve the needed insulation.

But I got A mind screwer here.

I filled in the same data into the new sorbothane calculator and got diffrent result then you Stuart.

strange...

but back to the basic principle.

So I make an enclosed box where the speaker is mounted inside resting on the 4 pads. I make the box larger then the speaker so i can eventually a fit larger speaker into it if needed in future. But what about the sides and top of the speakers? Put pads there also?

but this raises the question? Those pads are not loaded with weight so how calculate theire size?or just fill the cavity between box and speaker with rockwool??

or use pads bottom side and top and fill up the rest with rockwool?

Then mount this box on too a verry sturdy stand. Should I isolate the box from the stand? also with sorbothane?

This stand should I mount it onto the basement floor? or the studio floor?

the cavity between box and speaker I fill up with rockwool??


I'll make a rough idea drawing soon.

And Stuart i just want to say I am unbelievablie gratefull you are whilling to help me out here!

Thank you!
shimmer
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

soffit side view2 zoom3.jpg
soffit side view2.jpg
Hey Stuart,

I did a first draft of the side view of the soffit principle.

What do you think?

Greets

Nillis
shimmer
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Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

Hey Guys,

I read through this post once again and decided to change my speaker placement. why?

Because I needed more space to build the soffit, my speaker angle was not perfect and the listening position wasn't perfect either. as Stuart pointed out before.

So taking all his advice into acount I made a new front design. Also gives me the possibility to make an absorbive front.

as you suggested I moved back the soffits, and while I was @ it I changed to 60 degree speaker angle. I have the oportunitie to do it correctly, so i'll take it.

When anyone has the time take a look please.

Also from the reflection calculator my first reflection reaches the listening position @ 20,2 ms is 3 ms later then before.


http://amray.andymel.eu/

41505649383330<settngs>BEAMTRC<spview>-58.54974084376772:0.28716651295451356:1.0000000000000029<sktchpd>3%$102:594,438:594,102:290,128:208,210:162,412:208,330:162,438:290,362:162,362:179.862852#0:1,0:2,3:2,3:4,5:6,5:7,7:1,4:6,8:9%)361.9865784163334:179.94369147771474%(269.445207:324.4770759999997%


My only concern is my room ratio is no longer as suggested by L.W sepmeyer.

How does this affect my room? Or does the benefit of my current listening position, speaker angle en good soffit build outweigh the room ratio.

As the image I posted above shows, there's a region between the near field and the critical distance, called the "free field", where things are nice and smooth. That's the best place to be.
from Stuart.

How does one know if he is in the free field when still in the designing factor and taking all the before info into acount??


Thanks!
shimmer
Posts: 61
Joined: Thu Apr 12, 2012 8:38 pm
Location: Belgium (Limburg)

Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

Ok trying to design a decent soffit, with the little knowledge i've gathered here.

did little update on previous design, so if anyone can tell me if I'm going in the right direction / any feedback would be greatly appreciated.

major change = Baffle connection point in front of speaker. eleminating air gap

Rear wall spacing now as real life situation. +52cm from speaker back.

thanks for your time guys! I'm trying here!
shimmer
Posts: 61
Joined: Thu Apr 12, 2012 8:38 pm
Location: Belgium (Limburg)

Re: soffit or not?

Post by shimmer »

any feedback anyone?

thanks!
JeromyReno
Posts: 28
Joined: Fri Aug 25, 2017 7:47 am
Location: Reno NV USA

Re: soffit or not?

Post by JeromyReno »

I just wonder how you would calculate the sorbothne pads on the top. I know the weight of the monitor preloads the bottom ones. With no weight on the top ones they might not be doing much. Like just setting a spring on top of something. I'm still learning about sorbothne and I'm still calculating what I need for mine but that's my basicly my understanding so far.

The soffit design looks pretty bitchen though.
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