Importance of wall behind listener?


In my audio setup, I essentially have no back walls to speak of. Behind the listener is an opening into a long hallway, an opening to a den (to the left of listening position), and an opening to the kitchen (to the right of listening position). I'm wondering if this is a hinderence in getting a truly 3D holographic soundstage representation. Other folks who have a near identical systems get phenominal soundstages, so I know it's not any of the equipment. The difference is they have a back wall vs. my no back wall, and their straight ceiling vs. my sloped celiling (peaked at center, dropping on both sides).

Any thoughts?
1markr

Showing 2 responses by albertporter


I agree with Sns on this.
You may also want to try diffusers behind the speakers. I get a very nice enveloping and palpable soundstage with these treatments!

I tried damping panels, Polyester batting, tube traps (alone), diffusion by way of artificial plants and even carpet.

In the end, RPG QRD 734 diffusers directly behind the speakers worked the best. I disguised mine with acoustically transparent cloth (good wife acceptance factor) and wound up preferring the sound over the uncovered version.
1markr, you can look at my system here at Audiogon for the WAF images :^).

http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?vaslt&1022712214&view

Here is a photo of my QRD 734 during construction, built into the back wall.
http://cgim.audiogon.com/i/vs/i/f/1111001394.jpg

Click on room views to see the acoustical cloth wrapped around the room obscuring RPG's and damping panels.