Broadband absorption behind monitors?
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Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Some background.
I have a room which I use for mixing and tracking. Overall the room sounds good for tracking, and have just bought a pair of Eve SC208 monitors. It is compromised in terms of geometry and the requirement to be a tracking room as well as used for mixing.
I have placed the monitors up against the front wall.
I have read various articles which indicated to:
1. Place the monitors as close to the front wall.
2. Place 100mm absorbers on the front wall, behind the Monitors and place the monitors up against the absorbers.
My questions are:
1. Is there a way of understanding whether placing the absorbers will be beneficial without building them and trying it?
2. If so, how would I go about this analysis?
Many thanks in advance. This is a great forum..
I have also measured my room dimensions, and I have a picture attached to the file below..
Hopefully this works..
Regards Rob
I have a room which I use for mixing and tracking. Overall the room sounds good for tracking, and have just bought a pair of Eve SC208 monitors. It is compromised in terms of geometry and the requirement to be a tracking room as well as used for mixing.
I have placed the monitors up against the front wall.
I have read various articles which indicated to:
1. Place the monitors as close to the front wall.
2. Place 100mm absorbers on the front wall, behind the Monitors and place the monitors up against the absorbers.
My questions are:
1. Is there a way of understanding whether placing the absorbers will be beneficial without building them and trying it?
2. If so, how would I go about this analysis?
Many thanks in advance. This is a great forum..
I have also measured my room dimensions, and I have a picture attached to the file below..
Hopefully this works..
Regards Rob
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
The reason for placing the monitors as close to the front wall as possible is to reduce the effects of speaker boundary interference, it is the next best solution to actually flush mounting them in the wall itself. Another solution is flush mounting the speakers in soft and deep treatment wall, with the intention of absorbing some of the low frequencies before they have a chance to reflect back out into the room, delayed by however many ms to the direct signal. Of course, this requires very deep treatment in order to be effective all the way down the spectrum, if the loudspeakers go down to 40hz then the treatment would need to be around 2' thick in order to absorb down that low at 60% efficiency. Thicker than that and you quickly reach a point of diminishing returns with velocity based absorbers and membrane absorbers need to be deployed.greenlounge wrote:Some background.
I have a room which I use for mixing and tracking. Overall the room sounds good for tracking, and have just bought a pair of Eve SC208 monitors. It is compromised in terms of geometry and the requirement to be a tracking room as well as used for mixing.
I have placed the monitors up against the front wall.
I have read various articles which indicated to:
1. Place the monitors as close to the front wall.
2. Place 100mm absorbers on the front wall, behind the Monitors and place the monitors up against the absorbers.
My questions are:
1. Is there a way of understanding whether placing the absorbers will be beneficial without building them and trying it?
2. If so, how would I go about this analysis?
Many thanks in advance. This is a great forum..
I have also measured my room dimensions, and I have a picture attached to the file below..
Hopefully this works..
Regards Rob
My point is, 100mm absorbers behind the speakers aren't going to help much. low frequency radiates spherically from the driver, creeping behind the speakers, whereas mids and highs are more directional and do not radiate behind the speakers (apart from potential reflections off of room surfaces/rear of desk).
If your speakers are as close as you can get to the front wall already then any LF that goes behind will reflect off of the front wall with minimal delay, causing minimal audible problems. Ideally the front wall would be angled each side to follow the toe-in angle of your speakers, but even without that the issues will be minimised.
You may find that your speakers sound too "bassy" now, but that's because they probably have a built in baffle step compensation, if you can disable that then great, or if you just have a Low frequency control then turn it down until you get the flattest response.
Paul
Paul
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Paulus87.
Thank you very much for the prompt reply. Based on this I might leave the front wall as is.
I do have another question, as to the speaker and listening position. I have enclosed the room layout.
1. Is there a better place to put the speakers and the listening position?
If I need to have a seperate post, please let me know and I will do so.
Again, thanks for the information.
Regards Rob
Thank you very much for the prompt reply. Based on this I might leave the front wall as is.
I do have another question, as to the speaker and listening position. I have enclosed the room layout.
1. Is there a better place to put the speakers and the listening position?
If I need to have a seperate post, please let me know and I will do so.
Again, thanks for the information.
Regards Rob
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
greenlounge wrote:Paulus87.
Thank you very much for the prompt reply. Based on this I might leave the front wall as is.
I do have another question, as to the speaker and listening position. I have enclosed the room layout.
1. Is there a better place to put the speakers and the listening position?
If I need to have a seperate post, please let me know and I will do so.
Again, thanks for the information.
Regards Rob
Unfortunately it is a bit of an awkward room...but even the most ideal rooms are compromised, the trick is finding the best compromise.
a few accepted ideals for a critical listening room are:
- at least 1200 cubic feet in volume
- no dimensions the same or multiples within 5% of each other.
- a ceiling higher than 8'
- Left/Right Symmetry at least from the listening position forward (ideally the whole room)
- a listening position of 37.5% of the length between the front and rear walls
- the speakers fire down the longest dimension of the room
- appropriate treatment to deal with first order reflections back to the listening position and to attenuate modal resonances
As it is, your left/right symmetry is off due to the fireplace in the left corner, this could affect stereo imaging... measuring would confirm.
Ideally, in your room you would want to face one of the short walls, but I'm not sure I would advise it due to you having a fireplace in one corner and a door in the other, which prevents you being able to put decent bass trapping there.
On the plus side, with your room the way it is, it looks like you have an opening directly behind the mix position, which is good since it will extend the amount of time the sound needs to travel before bouncing back at your ears, which ideally would be more than 20ms after the direct sound and attenuated by at least 20db. Also, some of the low end frequencies will diffract around the opening and disperse into the open space behind.
Do you have any kind of acoustic treatment in your space at present? To be honest, it's quite an unusual room and the "best" listening position may be achieved through experimenting and lots of measuring.
Paul
Paul
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Paulus87.
Yes it is a bit of an unusual room.. The alcove part of room (the one with the external door), actually has a lot of stuff in it, all a bit random..
No I do not have any acoustic treatment at all, unless you consider a Hammond M series spinet in one corner and a Leslie 147 in the other..
There is a couch on the opposite wall from the window, next to the fireplace.
I have taken some measurements using REW but I am not 100% sure how to interpret them.
Again.. Thanks heaps..
Yes it is a bit of an unusual room.. The alcove part of room (the one with the external door), actually has a lot of stuff in it, all a bit random..
No I do not have any acoustic treatment at all, unless you consider a Hammond M series spinet in one corner and a Leslie 147 in the other..
There is a couch on the opposite wall from the window, next to the fireplace.
I have taken some measurements using REW but I am not 100% sure how to interpret them.
Again.. Thanks heaps..
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Acoustics of spaces not designed for sound purposes, are highly complex. Theories derived from more ideal spaces are not too far from guessing.
Acoustic testing is very affordable now, and it has certain results. Absorption behind monitors vs not, finding optimum locations for speakers and listener (which is interactive)...... REW and an Omni Mic.
Acoustic testing is very affordable now, and it has certain results. Absorption behind monitors vs not, finding optimum locations for speakers and listener (which is interactive)...... REW and an Omni Mic.
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Thanks DanDan.
I do have an Omni mic and REW. Is there a post which gives some insights on how to interpret the data? I have followed the post on how to calibrate the setup, but haven’t found anything which talks about analysing the data itself.
Regards Rob
I do have an Omni mic and REW. Is there a post which gives some insights on how to interpret the data? I have followed the post on how to calibrate the setup, but haven’t found anything which talks about analysing the data itself.
Regards Rob
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
You can upload the .mdat file online somewhere and provide us with the link, then we can take a look at it for you. But, I think we're all learning more and more about what the data is telling us all the time, at least I am.greenlounge wrote:Thanks DanDan.
I do have an Omni mic and REW. Is there a post which gives some insights on how to interpret the data? I have followed the post on how to calibrate the setup, but haven’t found anything which talks about analysing the data itself.
Regards Rob
The main things to learn how to read (in my opinion) is the ETC graph and the waterfall or spectrogram plots.
Paul
Paul
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
+1 The REW manual is extraordinarily good. IMO Measurement is superbly useful for telling if A is better than B.
Not so great at doing a full diagnostic on C.....
What are we looking for? Well no reflections for a little while after a hypothetical impulse. -20dBFS for the first 20mS, or better.
Then Room Decay third octaves varying no more than 10% from their neighbours either side. 200mS is good, but we would be happy with a rise to 400mS at LF.
Not so great at doing a full diagnostic on C.....
What are we looking for? Well no reflections for a little while after a hypothetical impulse. -20dBFS for the first 20mS, or better.
Then Room Decay third octaves varying no more than 10% from their neighbours either side. 200mS is good, but we would be happy with a rise to 400mS at LF.
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Thanks for all the responses..
I suppose the 1st things I would like to understand from the measurements are:
Are my measurements valid, and have I set everything up in REW correctly? I followed the sticky topic.
- I am using a DBX measurement mic, and do not have a calibration file for it. Model DBXRTA-M.
- I have calibrated SPL to 80 db as suggested but used a mobile phone app, weighted C slow.
How symmetrical is my stereo image across the frequency spectrum, considering I don't have a symmetrical room?
Looking at the different listening positions, how do I understand these, in view of the room geometry ?
Should I be looking for other listening positions, or even re-orient the speakers ?
- If so, is this trial and error ?
Please find enclosed a link to the REW file.
The speakers are positioned as per the drawing in the original post for all measurements.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/p3p4r4m021338 ... .mdat?dl=0
Once again, thanks for the great help here..
Regards Rob..
I suppose the 1st things I would like to understand from the measurements are:
Are my measurements valid, and have I set everything up in REW correctly? I followed the sticky topic.
- I am using a DBX measurement mic, and do not have a calibration file for it. Model DBXRTA-M.
- I have calibrated SPL to 80 db as suggested but used a mobile phone app, weighted C slow.
How symmetrical is my stereo image across the frequency spectrum, considering I don't have a symmetrical room?
Looking at the different listening positions, how do I understand these, in view of the room geometry ?
Should I be looking for other listening positions, or even re-orient the speakers ?
- If so, is this trial and error ?
Please find enclosed a link to the REW file.
The speakers are positioned as per the drawing in the original post for all measurements.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/p3p4r4m021338 ... .mdat?dl=0
Once again, thanks for the great help here..
Regards Rob..
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Are my measurements valid, and have I set everything up in REW correctly? I followed the sticky topic.
They do seem to be.
How symmetrical is my stereo image across the frequency spectrum, considering I don't have a symmetrical room?
Compare the SPL L vs R with the mic central.
Looking at the different listening positions, how do I understand these, in view of the room geometry ?
Eveness of FR and Decay, as in my post above.
Should I be looking for other listening positions, or even re-orient the speakers ?
- If so, is this trial and error ?
Yes, including varying the listening position. The RTA with Pink Noise will help you eliminate No Fly zones in real time.
I note that your speakers are between 1 and 2 metres from the Front Wall. That is a generally regarded as a No Fly Zone. http://arqen.com/acoustics-101/speaker- ... erference/
They do seem to be.
How symmetrical is my stereo image across the frequency spectrum, considering I don't have a symmetrical room?
Compare the SPL L vs R with the mic central.
Looking at the different listening positions, how do I understand these, in view of the room geometry ?
Eveness of FR and Decay, as in my post above.
Should I be looking for other listening positions, or even re-orient the speakers ?
- If so, is this trial and error ?
Yes, including varying the listening position. The RTA with Pink Noise will help you eliminate No Fly zones in real time.
I note that your speakers are between 1 and 2 metres from the Front Wall. That is a generally regarded as a No Fly Zone. http://arqen.com/acoustics-101/speaker- ... erference/
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Thanks DanDan..
Maybe a bit of confusion here, but in the measurements, my speakers are approx 40mm from the front wall, and for the various measurements, I have been moving the listening position only, the speakers have remained in this position.
In terms analysis..
If I look at the 1.2m listening position, which I am currently using:
The low frequency analysis shows substantial differences between the left and right speakers (enclosed file).
The overall frequency analysis does show differences, which I assume are due to the non-symmetrical nature of the room (I haven't enclosed this file, since I can only seem to do one at a time), but its in the data in the link.
How would I use the Time Domain analysis to get a better understanding of the characteristics of the room?
It would help me greatly if you can explain what I am looking for
Once I understand how the time domain analysis works, I will move the speakers and listening position around the room, and measuring.
Thanks again..
Maybe a bit of confusion here, but in the measurements, my speakers are approx 40mm from the front wall, and for the various measurements, I have been moving the listening position only, the speakers have remained in this position.
In terms analysis..
If I look at the 1.2m listening position, which I am currently using:
The low frequency analysis shows substantial differences between the left and right speakers (enclosed file).
The overall frequency analysis does show differences, which I assume are due to the non-symmetrical nature of the room (I haven't enclosed this file, since I can only seem to do one at a time), but its in the data in the link.
How would I use the Time Domain analysis to get a better understanding of the characteristics of the room?
It would help me greatly if you can explain what I am looking for
Once I understand how the time domain analysis works, I will move the speakers and listening position around the room, and measuring.
Thanks again..
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
REW is brilliant at comparing A vs B. Not so great at giving C a health check, i.e. an 'analysis'.
Many treatments are an absolute given e.g. Cloud, Side Reflection Absorbers, Back Wall Absorbers and Corner absorbers.
They work in every room. There is virtually no chance of doing too much of them.
Many treatments are an absolute given e.g. Cloud, Side Reflection Absorbers, Back Wall Absorbers and Corner absorbers.
They work in every room. There is virtually no chance of doing too much of them.
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Thank you DanDan.DanDan wrote:REW is brilliant at comparing A vs B. Not so great at giving C a health check, i.e. an 'analysis'.
Many treatments are an absolute given e.g. Cloud, Side Reflection Absorbers, Back Wall Absorbers and Corner absorbers.
They work in every room. There is virtually no chance of doing too much of them.
I do have one further question that isn’t really clear to me.
How do I interpret the REW data, specifically the time domain data to understand how much smearing I am getting from early reflections, at which frequency they are at?
I am thinking if I can deduce this from the data, I can then have a strategy to deal with these early reflections in an appropriate manner, considering the constraints of my room. For example I might need moveable absorbers placed at specific positions while mixing, which might block windows/doors or walkways.
Or are you saying I need to just take before measurements and try a treatment, measure and see what happens?
Thanks again.
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Re: Broadband absorption behind monitors?
Well I made the broadband absorbers today. 600x1200x142 with 100mm of FI48.
Will hang them them correctly and take some measurements to see the impact.
Regards Rob.
Will hang them them correctly and take some measurements to see the impact.
Regards Rob.