Let me get this straight: After rejecting our help on the forum, deleting all your earlier posts, and then saying that you had hired a professional acoustic company to build your studio instead, now you are suggesting that everyone should just forget about how acoustics really works, stop using the laws of physics and the principles of the science of acoustics to design their rooms, and instead should "follow this link and stop reading and getting confused with crap"? Is that the plan? Was that what you learned from the "acoustical engineering firm" that built your place? Is that their web site that you linked to?
That link led to a rather cheesy, amateurish web page, touting a plagiarized "device" that the author freely admits never having even tested, stating that he himself has no idea what it does, how it works, or even what frequency range it might happen to cover, but you think it must be great because it "looks like the ones the boys here are building"?
Good luck with that!
That's about as helpful as suggesting that egg-crates would be good treatment for home studios, because egg-crates just "look like" the sculpted acoustic foam that the "big boys" use....
I once saw a set of photos of a Porsche Carrera made from plastic pipe, wood, duct tape and other things. It too "looked like the ones the boys are driving", but I somewhat doubt that it performed in the same manner... Much like those "diffusers" at the link...
So thanks for the advice, but I think I'll stick to designing places based on the way things really work, not the way things might work in Goofy's wacky dreamland.
- Stuart -
PS:
" I thought I'd be helpful to the thousands of internet users like me who do not want to ... search endlessly for a simple plan on how to make a diffuser using standard measurements."
Sorry, but there's no such thing. Diffusers should be designed for the specific room they are meant to treat. That's why you can't find "standard plans", since all rooms are different. Sure, you CAN hang any old piece of diffuser junk in any room (many acoustically ignorant people do just that!) , and it will have an effect: but there's no saying what the "effect" might be, and the changes are pretty slim that it would be just what the room needed, and pretty darn good that it would not be even close.
Besides, the vast majority of home studios are too small to be able to use these diffusers. Numeric sequence diffusers are only appropriate for large rooms, where there is enough space between the diffuser and people's heads to smooth out the lobing artifacts...
So, for any future lurkers reading this thread months or years from now, who actually do want their rooms to work, please feel free to carry on reading the "crap" on this forum.... it really does work.