A couple of things come to my mind:
Did you turn off (or down) the LF control on your monitors? Most monitors come with baffle step compensation built in which can usually be controlled via a LF knob on the back.
Also, your baffles are quite small. I would expect a different result if the front wall was an actual wall, as rigid and dense as possible. Whether it would result in a better or worse response is another thing, but assuming you have sufficient trapping on the rear wall, side walls and ceiling then I'd expect a very even response in the LF.
Speaker baffle test - comments please!
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Re: Speaker baffle test - comments please!
Yes, there is a 0,-2, -4, -6, setting on the monitors. I have it at -4 now I think, and this has calmed down the big bump a bit.Paulus87 wrote:A couple of things come to my mind:
Did you turn off (or down) the LF control on your monitors? Most monitors come with baffle step compensation built in which can usually be controlled via a LF knob on the back.
Also, your baffles are quite small. I would expect a different result if the front wall was an actual wall, as rigid and dense as possible. Whether it would result in a better or worse response is another thing, but assuming you have sufficient trapping on the rear wall, side walls and ceiling then I'd expect a very even response in the LF.
As for the baffles, yes ... I've been playing with full sheets of drywall to test with (4x8') and the results do seem better.
Now that I moved the cloud to fix the ETC curve, I have some beefing up to do on the framing, a better box for the speakers ( I can definitely hear some rattling and buzzing), then I'll put up 2 full layers of plywood for the front wall and see how that works out. I think with some final room correction eq we'll be in the ballpark for sure.