Absorb or Diffuse Behind Listening Position?


Hey All. Starting to finally treat my listening room. My listening position is up against the rear wall (head probably being spaced about 12" from the wall when sitting down). I’m putting 2’x4’x2" absorbing panels behind the speakers, but what should I choose for behind the listening position? Diffusion or absorption?

There are al lot of windows in the room, with horizontal louvered shades which act as pretty decent diffusion; and a big built-in bookshelf on one side wall also helping with diffusion. On either side of the wall behind the listening position are a pair of glass French doors, untreated at this point, and the room sounds a lot better when they are left open to the big room on the other side of the wall. I haven’t tackled the ceiling yet either. Thanks!
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Having the listening position against the back wall is not ideal. I assume the OP has no other possible listening position available or perhaps it's a multi-purpose room and there must be a compromise. With that listening position you definitely don't want any reflective surfaces behind you. Diffusers do reflect sound but in a scattered pattern. It's easy to understand why sitting close to a real diffuser isn't ideal. Speak into one that is about 12 inches away and you will know.

What we have recommended before is to use broadband absorbers about 4 to 5 feet wide behind the listening position. Flanking the absorbers can be left reflective but diffusion is better.

Hey folks. Of course I’m working with compromises here. To start with, the compromise is the room: only a "semi-dedicated" listening room; lots of glass; a good bit longer than it is wide; a pair of glass french doors flanking the wall behind my listening position. The system is on the long wall. I’ve talked this through with the speaker designer and we decided that long-wall placement is best, but didn’t completely suss out the rest of the room treatment. Next, the speaker manufacturer’s geometry of 1 (speaker center to center) x 1.18 (perpendicular speaker plane to listening position). If I set up the system on the short wall, paying attention to how near the speakers are to the corners, I might only be 6’ deep in an 18’ long room with a sofa, rather than a listening chair as the center of attention. These speakers are supposed to placed as near to the wall as possible to take advantage of bass boundary-loading, and I’ve put a 2’x4’x2" mineral rock filled panel behind each speaker-pair (I have two pair of monitors spaced and inverted on each other, as recommended by the designer). So the wall behind me - in this semi-dedicated listening room - is the main issue. I’m not far enough for diffusion and more absorption panels might be too dead. I’m setting up some adjustable curtains to take some of the heat off the back wall. Surprisingly, bass problems aren’t that awful. Not sure why. It’s the high-mid and over-bright high frequencies which I’m working to damp at this point. One side wall is good, another is a bit reflective and will probably need something. Ceiling will come last if still needed. Thanks for all the input!
To answer the question you actually asked -- I repeat -- try something like the ASC Matrix Panel or RPG BAD panel. They are made for the application. The GIK Alpha line might work, too, but I’ve not tried it in that application (very close to the listener).

Unlike "real" diffusers, you can speak right into these products and not get phasey or unpleasant sound. And unlike broadband absorbers, they don’t create acoustic dead spots. If you are going to sit near the back wall, I don’t think you will do better.