Room divider


I would like some feedback from people who use a room divider. My listening room is rather a lot longer than wider. So my listening area is about half the length of my total room. The other end is more of a sitting area with a couch and chair coffee table and end tables. It’s really my Rolling Stones room where I have all my Rolling Stones autographs hung on my walls. Anyway I was thinking about a room divider behind my listening chair when I’m the only one listening to music. Would this be a good idea for better sound as to keep more of it in my listening area ? Anyone have any thoughts or have done the same ? 

tattooedtrackman

Showing 4 responses by mahgister

You are right...I will not advise that..

 But i installed a foldable screen behind my listening position but it was MY ROOM,

with 100 resonators and heavily transformed... In a normal room i dont think that it will be perfect at all..

And my foldable screen was modified by acoustic devices too...

General rule : no foldable screen behind ...But every rule may had exception..😊

It is why small room acoustic is so complex... General recipe are only that : general recipe...

 

I would not recommend a screen behind you. I tried a folding screen like bleske’s behind me and it messed up the sound. My listening area opens into the rest of the space and sounds much better that way.

«Music is the only screen behind God and us, but this screen is more a revelatory veil than a hiding  screen  and anyway  it is not a foldable one »-- Anonymus foldable screen designer... 😊

Very beautiful...

I like foldable screen... As acoustic device... And for the beauty of it... 😊

Why not ?

I used a foldable screen as a sonic lense in my small room..

My room was relatively small and i used with success in this heavily occupied acoustic room by hundred of devices the screen as an acoustic device concentrating the waves and conveying them ...Yes it was mad... But my soundfield was very remarkable...

Listen and you will discover the right way,...

In acoustic there is not so much  bad rooms , as mere  bad tuning...