Hi Bnauka:
I don't have his book and have not read it. If you are like me you made a mistake the first time around.(hehe) It is difficult to believe that the book has an error because it has been through several editions hasn't it?
The numbers you got are too low. Your room can't be that dead? Everest (Master Handbook of Acoustics)presents a graph of average living rooms and it was .69s at 125hz and .4s at 8khz. You didn't mix up feet and meters or use a wrong absorption coefficient? What equation does he present in the book?
There is not to much to mess up in the basic formula.
RT60 = k*(V/Sa). k is a constant that equals 0.161 when the units of measurement are metric (in meters for our use) and 0.049 when units are expressed in feet. Sa is the total surface absorption of a room expressed in Sabins. V is room's volume. Is this the equation Harley uses?
Double check it with an online calculator.
http://www.csgnetwork.com/acousticreverbdelaycalc.html
or
http://www.trinitysoundcompany.com/rt60.html
The Linkwitz site is good on this too.
http://www.linkwitzlab.com/rooms.htm
I remain,
I don't have his book and have not read it. If you are like me you made a mistake the first time around.(hehe) It is difficult to believe that the book has an error because it has been through several editions hasn't it?
The numbers you got are too low. Your room can't be that dead? Everest (Master Handbook of Acoustics)presents a graph of average living rooms and it was .69s at 125hz and .4s at 8khz. You didn't mix up feet and meters or use a wrong absorption coefficient? What equation does he present in the book?
There is not to much to mess up in the basic formula.
RT60 = k*(V/Sa). k is a constant that equals 0.161 when the units of measurement are metric (in meters for our use) and 0.049 when units are expressed in feet. Sa is the total surface absorption of a room expressed in Sabins. V is room's volume. Is this the equation Harley uses?
Double check it with an online calculator.
http://www.csgnetwork.com/acousticreverbdelaycalc.html
or
http://www.trinitysoundcompany.com/rt60.html
The Linkwitz site is good on this too.
http://www.linkwitzlab.com/rooms.htm
I remain,