Room Treatment: A Primer


When a speaker emits sound waves, they travel to your listening position but also to the ceiling, sides walls and floor, where they are reflected toward the listening position. While these first reflections arrive later and are measurably distinct from the initial signal, they reach our ears too soon for our psychoacoustic system to distinguish them from the initial signal and they become one in our head. What can be lost or overwhelmed by this wave interference are the subtler sounds that can help depict hall size, performer placement, soundstage width and depth, and the music’s overall tonal signature. This is more the "psycho" part of psychoacoustics and is distinct from the later reflections that bounce around the room and result in frequency peaks and nulls that accrue from room modes and the like. These later reflections might also interfere with the initial speaker signal much as first reflections do, but they further screw up the sound as they contribute to a less than smooth room frequency curve and/or cause “ringing”. Treatment at first reflection points helps a lot, but whole room treatment is necessary to deal with these later reflections.

Absorption simply captures these interfering wave reflections and converts them to heat. Diffusion breaks the waves up and reflects them in different directions instead of directly back at you. To better understand diffusion’s role, imagine being in a room and shooting a shotgun directly at a flat wall (no diffusion) versus against a rock wall (diffusion). The return path of the former is predictable and most are flying directly back at you. The latter will have much of the shot going elsewhere and taking a more circuitous route, bouncing off the surfaces of the room and even bumping into other shot before they might return to you. Because they are fewer, have been delayed, and have a lower energy, their return will not bother you as much as if they came flying straight back at you. Similarly, diffusion provides a time delay along with a weaker signal, allowing your psychoacoustic system to ignore or at least differentiate the reflections from the initial signal. Scattering panels work similarly and often are combined with absorption.

At a minimum, you want to avoid "first reflections" and instead have either "first absorption" or diffusion. Opinions are mixed as to which is better. It is probably easier to do absorption with standard home goods/furnishings such as rugs, blankets, curtains, overstuffed couches, etc. Some suggest that books and records have significant absorption properties, but I would argue they are primarily reflective and if there is absorption, it is over an extremely limited frequency range.  Bookshelves, racks, and the like do not give a predictable diffusion pattern. You may be getting different reflections from various media or equipment but they will not have the significant and ordered differences in depth to achieve meaningful diffusion. Neither will a popcorn ceiling nor textured wallpaper. On the other hand, if you wanted to arrange your equipment or books to follow a QRD pattern, you might see some benefit. Also, while too much absorption can be a bad thing as it sucks the reverberant life out of the room, I am not sure there is such a thing as too much diffusion.

If you cannot go full Monty because  of WAF, expense, room layout, etc., at the least put a rug down in front of you, avoid any hard surfaces such as a table between you and the speakers, and hang draperies on your windows and tapestries on your wall at the first reflection points.
tcutter

Showing 3 responses by mahgister

I did what i did not only because i was in retirement but i did not had the money to invest in high end...

To be satisfied with a minimal acoustic satisfaction threshold, i had no choice save study... And experiment...

If i had the money i would have bought  also the AD powr sorcer... Why not ?

Anyway i learned so much being "poor" and in the obligation to stay low budget, i was lucky...

But  Helmholtz resonator are mechanical device unlike the AD-POWR which seems to be a sophisticated power conditioner...

The design seems interesting...

But i cannot buy that anyway...

If i could i will invest in a Choueiri DaC...

I am so happy with my low cost headphone system as i created it, i can go without new improvement anyway...

I wish you the best with my heart...

 

 

 

 

 

@mahgister 

I always like reading about your knowledge of resonators. Being a novice in the matter, I chose to invest in an AD-POWR Sorcer x4 harmonic resonator and I very much enjoy the extra liveliness it provides. 

 

Baylinor is right!

as i said, i am in retirement and it takes me 2 year full time to figure out everything needed..

But trust me my system (low cost) was audiophile (spatial characteristics of sound were incredible all sound around my listening position, speakers dont exist anymore) ...

It could have been improved for sure with high end components, but after my optimization of my low cost system i was already in heaven, it was enough for my needs and budget...

With the same knowledge i can now optimize any system at any price anyway...

I did it a second time with a smaller system ( way less spectacular because desktop speakers cannot replace full and big speakers)

I  had used my acoustics knowledge to optimize my headphone also and i own now one of the best headphone in the world (soundfield natural and out of my head)

Acoustics rules....

Someone saying otherwise is ignorant...

 

It’s a lot more complicated than upgrading components. That’s why the majority do without.

I learn acoustics experimenting but also reading a lot about acoustics concepts. It takes me 2 years full time to understand... I am retired... If not i would had never try. I owned a dedicated room if not i would not had tried either...

 Save all we can read about balance between reflection/absorbtion /diffusion...

The most important discovery for me was how to use the basic physical device  at the root of modern acoustics : Helmhotz resonators...

it was my means to modify my room acoustics content and acoustics parameters by using different location for many of them and not only their mechanically variable cross ratio parameters...

I did all that for fun using my hearing to tune them and place them at the right spot all around the speakers and my listening position...

If you dont read basic scientific articles about room acoustics and many deep acoustics phenomenon like the ratio between LAV/ASW you will not do the right thing...

If you dont want to take all this time the best solution exist now and even if you dont buy it you can read also the articles about sound by Dr. Edgar Choueiri you will learn many thing which are nowhere else easy to find......