I was interested by this paper and had discussed it some time ago with a friend (mathematician).
We made a VERY approximative experiment trying to apply the model.
Of course, our room was irregular: floor had/has two levels, ceiling is roof with beems, stairway to one side & in the middle of the long length, front wall lower hight than back wall (slanted roof, etc). It's an attic, as you've already guessed.
The signal went through (active & passive) volume control(s) to two, then three amps, i.e., 1-> wide range driver unit, 1->bass unit 1->"sub"-bass (40-~22Hz).
We placed the latter on either side of a (listening area) couch at a variety of distances.
We used an active xover unit with phase control.
Approximating the perceived "pressure uniformity" referred to in the article, we found (afai remember) little difference between 45-90 degrees phase lag between the two sub units. OTOH and quite amazingly, I distinctly remember that alternating the phase lag between the two units did make a difference.
This is just anecdotal, we didn't have appropriate s/ware, equip, etc.
Cheers
We made a VERY approximative experiment trying to apply the model.
Of course, our room was irregular: floor had/has two levels, ceiling is roof with beems, stairway to one side & in the middle of the long length, front wall lower hight than back wall (slanted roof, etc). It's an attic, as you've already guessed.
The signal went through (active & passive) volume control(s) to two, then three amps, i.e., 1-> wide range driver unit, 1->bass unit 1->"sub"-bass (40-~22Hz).
We placed the latter on either side of a (listening area) couch at a variety of distances.
We used an active xover unit with phase control.
Approximating the perceived "pressure uniformity" referred to in the article, we found (afai remember) little difference between 45-90 degrees phase lag between the two sub units. OTOH and quite amazingly, I distinctly remember that alternating the phase lag between the two units did make a difference.
This is just anecdotal, we didn't have appropriate s/ware, equip, etc.
Cheers