Removed sofa, thought I needed more bass trapping
Need some help here with Room Acoustics and Bass Trapping. I removed the sofa in my listening room and in its place put a leather listening chair.
I just assumed that I would need additional room treatments. The sound definitely did get a brighter after removing the sofa. With the new Leather chair and all (reflective), I expected this.
I had 4 bass traps in the room already, in each corner of the room. Jon Rietch states that one can never have too many bass traps??? So I thought I would try building his panel style DIY bass traps to add to my existing traps.
The result is not good sounding. The whole soundstage narrowed, brightened further, and bloom disappeared etc. It was like the lower to mid frequencies diminished. Bass traps improve and define the lower region. That is what my other ones did.
So, maybe I overtreated the room?? In other words, "Did the extra heavy fiberglass insulation in the panels made the room 'acoustically dead' and not lively enough"????
I tried putting all the new panel traps I built on the opposite wall (back wall) from the speakers. At least in multi channel mode (home theater) the result was one of hearing the surround speakers in an unnatural way rather than ambience. In two channel stereo listening, it did not have a profound effect on the sound.
Any ideas where I am going wrong with my thoughts here? The speakers are Maggie 1.6. Maybe the sofa really wasn't absorbing much to begin with? You'd think that all those cushions would have to have tamed the room somehow though.
Hopefully this will generate some lively discussion.
R.