Room Treatments added, with negative effects..


Hi Folks:
I purchased a set of foam acoustic room treatments and set them up in my listening room. It now seems that the soundstage has collapsed somewhat, and the sound is less ambient, filling the room less. I'm wondering have I overdone the treatments, or placed them incorrectly or maybe I really just didn't need them to begin with. Can anyone offer any advice or thoughts?

I purchased 12 24inch by 24inch panels of ProFoam treatments from Audioadvisor.com which were pretty reasonable at about $150 for the set. I set up four panels behind the speaker position going from left to right at about 20 inches above the floor, and seven panels behind the listening position (three from left to right about 10 inches above the floor and the other four above those from left to right). Side positioning wasn't really possible because I have glass doors on one side and a corridor on the other.

My system is Audio Physic Virgo, Supratek Syrah pre, Blue Circle BC2 monos, Teres 135/OL Silver/Shelter 501mk2 vinyl rig.

I'm keen to hear any comments or advice on how I can improve my use of the room treatments, or whether I just need to scrap them. Thanks!
Outlier.
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Showing 1 response by rives

Acoustics can be tricky. Actual acoustical measurements can make a tremendous difference in designing a room, but even without them if the room is basic (rectangular and no openings) then basic math and experience can yield a good result. SD's advice is also good, but there is a small correction. LEDE originated from studio control rooms. The live end was behind the listener and the dead end behind the speakers. This is good for control rooms--but bad for listening rooms. The LEDE method that SD describes is actually the inverse of the original LEDE--but it is the one that I agree with for audiophile listening rooms. It allows short reverberation times near the speakers which adds to ambiance and it controls the long reverberation times behind the listener. I could go into a very lengthy discussion on the philosophy of this, but I think most people would fall aspleep.

The other thing is that applying only one type of acoustical treatment, in your case high frequency absorption, generally does not yield good results. You need to judiciously deal with the entire range of frequencies from low, mid, to high. I'm not really surprised that things sounded dull and calapsed after applying this material--you need to do some other things as well most likely.

Our listening room, a basic tutorial on room acoustics, may provide you with some insite:
the listening room