Mdat file wasnt allowed to upload,
Upload it to a file sharing services, such as Dropbox, then post the link here on the forum.
but from what i can see there are peaks at approx
37,42,49,57,62,75,85,95,113,128,147,166,188,211,227,235,243,273
The peaks in the SPL graphs are basically irrelevant to determining what the acoustic problems are in the room. They show only the frequency response as seen at the measurement mic, but they don't tell you anything about the phase or the time-domain response, nor the way the energy decays over time, nor reflections. All of that information is in the MDAT file, but it's not so easy to interpret. The frequencies you mentioned might or might not be associated with the actual problems you are experiencing. Also, you only mentioned the peaks, but peaks are only part of the issue: A far bigger problem is the nulls...
half a wavelength at 4.13m (width) is 41Hz
half a wavelength at 2.12m (height) is 80Hz
quarter of a wavelength at 2.35m (depth) is 36Hz
That might or might not be relevant. Modal response is a lot more complex than just axial modes, which is what you are looking at. There are also tangential modes and oblique modes, and it is quite possible that only a small set of modes is actually being triggered.
There is also a steep leveldrop in the decay between 55 and 72hz (The ventilationshaft acting as a basstrap?)
Possibly, but unlikely. It is far more probably that it is acting as a resonant cavity, and is resonating at one or more of its natural frequencies.
a large stage downstairs with its own sets of problems, but them i have solved by ear with some very narrow notchfilters.
Notch filters do not fix acoustic problems. No EQ can fix acoustic problems. EQ can disguise some problems to a certain extent, but it cannot fix acoustic problems properly, because acoustic problems are not in the frequency domain: they are also in the time domain, and EQ can do nothing about things that happen after the sound leaves the speakers...
I found a program called roomeqwizard
Yup, thats REW!
Room
Eq
Wizard"...
All the help to understand the measurements seems to be aviable there too
There's a lot of info there, but analyzing REW data completely isn't as easy as it sounds. The guy who wrote REW (another "John"!) also posts over there, and you can ask him, but he's very busy as you can imagine, and he can't answer everything.
-I think a REW is a very important first step, for example, it wouldnt be useful to calculate on a roofheight of 2.12m if the ventilationshaft is invisible to those frequencies
REW won't help you with that, and in fact your ventilation shaft won't be "invisible" to any frequencies. But since you mentioned it, what is the problem with the shaft? Is it causing problems? What problems?
the with is about 3.9m and i would guess the depth is about 2-2.5m, and then the roofheight of 2.12m on that..
That is indeed a very small stage! And with a very low ceiling as well... That's about the size of a bedroom, not a stage! How many musicians are on there, and what instruments are you playing?
The primary problem is a huge bass buildup in the stage from both the PA and the bassguitar, making it impossible for the musicians both to hear anything in the mess of ringing bassfrequecies on the stage or for the soundguy to make the kickdrum loud enough to hear without feedback.
It sounds like you have three different problems there, and you probably won't like what I'm going to say, but I'll say it anyway.
Now that we can confirm that there is a huge problem here, then what would be the best way to solve this??
OK, so here goes: the wqay I see it from what you have said so far is that you have these three basic problems:
1) Lousy acoustics on the stage. This can be treated to a certain extent with acoustic absorption panels, but the stage is too small for treatment to be the only solution. There is not enough room on the stage to install the amount of treatment that you would need. You could put up some thick OC-703 panels on the walls (at least 10cm thick, and preferably 15cm or 20 cm, spaced at least 20cm away from the walls), and also on the ceiling, and they will help to a certain extent, but that's not the real solution here.
2) Stage monitoring issues. Pretty much all musicians that I have every worked with are partially deaf (not belittling: just stating fact), which means that they want the stage monitors LOUD. With your stage, it is not an option to have loud stage monitors. They MUST be kept down very, very quiet, or they will just be triggering all of the stage build up (modes). In fact, with your stage the best idea is not to have any stage monitors at all! This can be solved easily from the technical point of view, but not the human point of view, or the budget point of view. Technically, the solution is to eliminate the stage monitors completely and replace them with an in-ear monitoring system, where each musician has control over his own return mix. However, many musicians find it hard to adapt to in-ear monitoring, and you'll get a lot of resistance at first, but it is the only real solution. If you stick with it, then it will solve a large chunk of your problems. However, a good in-ear system is not cheap. But it is the best solution.
3) Microphone setup / system setup / mix setup. If you are getting feedback on the kick drum, then there signal chain is very badly set up!

Very likely you are not using a drum mic setup that is good for that specific stage, and most certainly the signal chain after the mic is not configured or adjusted correctly. If you had correct mic setup, correct gain control, and good gating, then it would be impossible to have feedback related to the kick drum. I would suggest that you try the "Recorderman" mic setup, using just four mics, and put your kick mic deep inside the kick drum, through the hole in the front head, and positioned just an inch or two away from the spot where the beater hits the rear head. Then put a gate on that channel on the console, using the "insert" jack, and adjust the gain and gate to get only the initial attack of the beater striking the head, with just a tiny amount of actual shell resonance. So your kick gate will only be open for about half a second, and there won't be any feedback on that mic at all. You'll also need to heavily damp the kick inside (blankets, pillows, foam, etc.). Also EQ that heavily: pull out the entire mid range form that mic, leaving only the low-end for the "whooommmm" sound, and some mid-high for the actual beater "slap" sound. You will need a second gate for the snare mic, which should be close-mic'd very low to the snare head. EQ out the kick and cymbals. With this system, the overheads are actually the main mics for the drum kit, and the kick and snare mics just add the "bite and snap" that the overheads don't get. If you set it up properly, and also EQ the kick and snare mics properly, then there should never be any feedback. Of course, there should also never be any of the drums mics in the monitor mixes either. It simply isn't necessary. If this is done right, there will be more than enough kick volume in the FOH speakers, and no feedback at all.
The sub (2x15" @ 3000w) is now in a position where it makes the most impact for DJbased electronic dancemusic, (which from the beginning was what that area only was used for) But a movement of the subs of 5-10 cm in relation to the stageroom also decides how much bass there is in different parts of the audience area, so the resonances in the stageroom is really strong.
It sounds like the entire sound system was never installed or configured properly! It sounds like it was just done by a DJ or sound tech to "sound good" for his music, which often happens in clubs. It would be good to get a professional sound engineering company to come in and re-install the system properly. You need someone who understands both sound systems and also room acoustics, who will first test the room in many ways to understand it, then re-install and re-orient all of the speakers where they are supposed to be for optimum results, followed by checking over and re-calibrating all of the equipment in the sound system as well, to optimize it for the speakers and room acoustics.
This is a problem I deal with all the time: when I do consulting for situations like yours with customers like you, invariably the first thing I find is that the speakers are positioned incorrectly, aimed incorrectly, adjusted incorrectly, and are often the wrong type of speaker anyway! Fixing the speaker setup is probably about 25% of fixing the problems I'm hired to fix. The next 25% is the sound system gain structure, equalization and dynamics, all the way through from the mics to the speakers. Just setting up those two items correctly (speaker aiming, gain structure) normally gets a very big smile on the face of the customer. I usually gets comments like "Wow! What did you
DO? Is that the same equipment we have always been using? Did you install something new?" Nope. All I did was adjust it correctly. The next 25% is acoustics. Sometimes acoustics accounts for more than that (often a lot more), and good use of acoustic treatment can make a really big difference. In your case, putting in great acoustic panels will make things maybe 20% to 30% better. That's all.
The final 25% is the hardest of all, because it's not about technical things that can be adjusted by turning some knobs or aiming a speaker differently or hanging an acoustic panel. This is the "people" issue, and it has to do with the musicians and the sound operators. They do not like someone coming in from outside to tell them that they are doing things wrong and have to change. The speaker does not care if I move it, the console does not care if I change the gain or the EQ, the gates and compressors don't care if adjust their settings,and the panels don't care where I hang them... but the musicians do NOT like being adjusted! And that's the biggest issue I face in fixing the problems that my customers want me to fix to make their halls sound good. You will face the same issue, I'm sure: the musicians will NOT want to have the floor monitors placed differently, mixed differently, or run at lower levels. They will also NOT want to have in-ear monitors. They will NOT like the sound of the dry, gated, EQ'd drums. And they will want it all to go back the way it was before.... If so, then it will not be possible to get the results you are looking for!
Sad to say, but if your band is like the vast majority of the bands I deal with, you'll only ever get the first 25% to 75% of your issues fixed... unless you can convince the musicians to be a bit more humble, think of the audience (instead of themselves) and learn a better way of doing things. In the few places where the musicians really do want to learn, and are willing to make some uncomfortable changes, the results have been quite spectacular....
So that's the basic plan here: Your problems are only partly acoustic, and that part can be improved with acoustic treatment, but no amount of acoustic treatment is going to solve all of your issues, because 75% of them are not even acoustic.
- Stuart -