Raquel,
I'm well aware that Sound by Singer is a well respected
audio dealer - and they set up their rooms properly.
What you fail to appreciate is that you can't take the
room out of the equation. No matter how you treat the
walls of a room - the walls still reflect sound.
My comments are not ill-reasoned. Solving the wave
equation that dictates the propagation of sound in air
is one of my specialties.
The propagation of sound in a room is dictated by the
wave equation; a second order partial differential equation.
Mathematics requires that one provide "boundary conditions"
in order for the problem to be well posed.
The walls of the room provide those boundary conditions.
No matter how you treat the walls - they still reflect
sound to a degree. Because of the reflection of sound from
the walls; you get "room modes".
For example, if the room is 20 feet in some linear
dimension - length or width - then there are room modes
at frequencies of 26.6 Hz and 53.2 Hz corresponding to
a half-wavelength and a full-wavelength fitting that
dimension, respectively.
This gives you "standing waves" at those frequencies -
the music at 26.6 Hz and 53.2 Hz will be accentuated.
If you move to a different room, with different dimensions,
then different frequencies are accentuated.
There is no way that the people at Sound by Singer can
get around this. It is just a simple fact of life when
it comes to audio, that is dictated by the Physics of
sound travelling in air.
Because you auditioned two different systems, in two
rooms that you stated were different in size; then the
rooms were accentuating different frequencies and thus
you would have heard differences even if you were listening
to the exact same audio setup.
Because you don't know what the room is doing to the
sound, any comparisons where the room acoustics are
different is invalid.
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
I'm well aware that Sound by Singer is a well respected
audio dealer - and they set up their rooms properly.
What you fail to appreciate is that you can't take the
room out of the equation. No matter how you treat the
walls of a room - the walls still reflect sound.
My comments are not ill-reasoned. Solving the wave
equation that dictates the propagation of sound in air
is one of my specialties.
The propagation of sound in a room is dictated by the
wave equation; a second order partial differential equation.
Mathematics requires that one provide "boundary conditions"
in order for the problem to be well posed.
The walls of the room provide those boundary conditions.
No matter how you treat the walls - they still reflect
sound to a degree. Because of the reflection of sound from
the walls; you get "room modes".
For example, if the room is 20 feet in some linear
dimension - length or width - then there are room modes
at frequencies of 26.6 Hz and 53.2 Hz corresponding to
a half-wavelength and a full-wavelength fitting that
dimension, respectively.
This gives you "standing waves" at those frequencies -
the music at 26.6 Hz and 53.2 Hz will be accentuated.
If you move to a different room, with different dimensions,
then different frequencies are accentuated.
There is no way that the people at Sound by Singer can
get around this. It is just a simple fact of life when
it comes to audio, that is dictated by the Physics of
sound travelling in air.
Because you auditioned two different systems, in two
rooms that you stated were different in size; then the
rooms were accentuating different frequencies and thus
you would have heard differences even if you were listening
to the exact same audio setup.
Because you don't know what the room is doing to the
sound, any comparisons where the room acoustics are
different is invalid.
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist