Sound traps/acoustic panels to improve the sound


I need advice:

I have open-baffle Concentus Lyra speakers manufactured by Nightingale (Italy). They had marvelous sound, especially with jazz, but when I moved to a new flat, I was aware that they lack HF extension as if covered with a blanket. The amp is Cary SLI-80 (the other amp is the older SLI-50). They are positioned against the short wall opposite the balcony and placed nearly in the middle of the room.
The manufacturer had told me before that these speakers do not require any specific placement or room treatment.
My question is: should I look for any sound traps/acoustic panels or other room tweaks to improve the sound? I have other speakers on loan now (the cheapest Montana DPS speakers) and they sound very balanced, though do not reproduce jazz music as well as the former speakers. With the former speakers, I was surprised to hear the cymbals when I moved close to them (to high frequency drivers), while I don't hear them from my listening spot (which is not the case with Montana - I can hear everything from my listening spot).
I will appreciate all thoughts and recommendations.
transl

Showing 1 response by audiokinesis

Increasing the amount of absorptive material in your room is, in my opinion, more likely than not a step in the wrong direction. Nearly all absorptive materials are more effective at short wavelengths (high frequencies) than at long ones, and it sounds to me like the last thing you need is decreased high frequency energy.

Check to make sure the tweeters really are working. It is possible that something got jarred loose in shipment, yet the midrange drivers still put out enough highs so that you can hear the cymbals from up close.

Assuming the tweeters are working fine, unless your room is way overdamped already and your tweeters beam severely and are not aimed at the listening position, I'm stumped.

Back to the issue of room treatment - personally I prefer diffusion to absorption, as diffusion preserves high frequency reverberant energy while avoiding a strong, distinct early reflection (which is detrimental to imaging). Specifically, I use fake ficus trees in the first reflection zones.

Duke