the room: diffusors, absorbers, plants, books, mdf


I'm just putting my first system into place. I was having brightness problems which lead to rapid listening fatigue. My room is 8' tall, 13' wide and 19' long, thick plaster walls, hardwood floor (large throw rug) and lots of big windows. I've treated the room with covering windows with heavy cotton sheets (drapes are on the way), hanging throw rugs on the corners of the front wall and back wall, bookshelves on the back wall. The sound is much better, however ... it really looks terrible. I'm thinking of placing fiber board covered with fabric (12'' by 8') in the corners, first reflexion and behind the speakers. Also to place book shelves and large plants on the front and side walls. Help before I've started!? What's the best, least expensive way to tweak my room so that it still looks good.

Thanks
andrew
atlasman

Showing 1 response by tom_nice


First read F. Alton Everest's "Sound Studio Construction on a Budget" (or his "Master Handbook of Acoustics", 2nd or 3rd edition--since the 4th is supposed to contain errors) and analyze your room's main resonant modes. Everest goes into lots of commercial and DIY treatment devices. I have designs for RPG-style diffusors, which people sometimes admire as sculptures, and Argent Room Lens clones--please email me if you'd like me to email them to you. If you'll forgive my putting it so, you're in the kindergarten stage, pretty much--but reading Everest will educate you fast. It needn't be ugly though it may not pass for an ordinary room.