Before all the deep pockets chime in I’m going to represent the budget end..
Search Amazon for Acoustic Panels..The ones I ended up going with are 1/4" thick,made from a composite polyester fibre & felt,NOT CHEAP FOAM..I used 12" x 12" size for the upper ceiling to wall transitions & 4’ x 2 ’ panels for the walls..I left some open areas on the walls so as to not overdamp the room...TOTALLY eliminated the horrible echo/reverb I had..Cost me a total of $350.00 to do the entire room..
You can spend a LOT more but I doubt you will get dramatically better results...
Room Treatment Help
I just moved to the DFW area and drew the short straw for the wife assigned small 10 x 12 x 9’ soon to become, dedicated listening room. It’s in dire need of treatment as there’s a weird resonance, echo sound when clapping your hands. I’ve tried LRS + and open baffle speakers (Spatial Audio Lab) with a nice tube pre and both tube and ss amps. I’m just not happy with the room acoustics. I know I need help and realize small rooms are inherently tough to get good sound. My question is, where in the world do I start? GIK, Primacoustic, Acoustic Fields (Dennis Foley- this guy makes sense) etc? There are tons of YouTube vids out there, I’ve probably watched most of them but the topic is as confusing as trying to come up with end game components for an audiophile. Thanks in advance for your thoughts and experiences as they are highly appreciated!
@freediver I’ve actually got ATS Acoustic panels in my cart. Haven’t pulled the trigger yet. There’s 2” and 4” thickness? No clue to what “actually will work in my room. Really nice job on your room. Looks sharp! And it sounds like there’s a definite room improvement. |
IMO,the problem with the ATS & similar panels will do nothing to eliminate the eco/reverb,which is likely coming from the ceiling/wall transitions..If you put the ATS panels right in the wall corners it will help but you really need to address the entire surface area in the room where these transitions are located... |
what you need to do is not just jump into buying treatment. first is RTA with REW and a calibrated mic. do iterative speaker placement with your speakers and take RTA to determine what has the best balance and listen to confirm. Only then can you know what kind of treatment you need Also, @keeferdog, speak to Vespers of Warp Academy here |
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Measure the room before making any purchases. IMHO @freediver panels could address some frequencies but for bass problems you need other products with much more mass. On a prior home (room was 10x11x8), I “removed” the corners with PEG board and filled the empty space behind with Corning pads. Then covered it with speaker fabric. I used a thick pile carpet with double padding on the floor and wrapped 6 Corning pads with fabric for first reflections. It sounded great. |
Generally for Absorption a Rockwool with a Compression of 35Kg per m3 is ample to tame reflections. A simple framing and a cheap fabric covering on both faces as the initial design will create plenty to start to manage the energies present that are influencing how the End Sound is perceived. Symmetry is usually important, so Two Panels - Four Panels - Six Panels will be the requirement if more Panels are introduced. I like a Floor to Ceiling Panel when used in the Room Corner, set up to triangulate the corner as the Panel being offset from the Wall absorbs reflected energy bounced back. This is not achievable when a Door is in Room Corner. A 'L' Shape Panel is required, the Door will need a Panel attached to the Room Side Face of the Door and above the Door and the perpendicular wall will need a Panel placed. The Width of all Panels used at Room Corners as a Triangulation need not excess 900mm. The Door Panel width should be mimicked by the Panel used on the Perp' Wall. A Wall Panel need not be more than the Height of a standard widow in a Room, expected to be approx' 4ft -1200mm as the largest dimension. The Wall Panel width can be 1ft - 300mm made with a little more robust framing as it will be hung of the wall not in direct contact, as in the Corner a space between panel and wall has benefits for capturing bounce back energy. A Window can have a Acoustic Material used for the Curtain. A Curtain Rail can have a simple design for a secondary rail suspended from it, which can be used to hang a One Panel or a Few Absorption Panels on. Reflective energy that benefits from dispersion can be picked up on, when the placing of absorption panels is showing benefits, that show the experimentation has been worthwhile. I have a dispersion on the Wall behind Speakers and behind the Listener, laces on the Walls Centre, both at a 50/50 Split of Width and Height. On the Side Walls I have split the two used absorption Panels with a spacing of 1ft - 300mm and used a dispersion panel of the same width to infill the Space. A Dispersion or Absorption Panel can also be suspended from the ceiling if energies are not being fully captured. The Flooring is one of the easiest to treat. A soft furnishing can be placed if there is a hard surface finish in use. If a Carpet is used, this can already be quite an effective at absorption, maybe too effective? There is no reason to spend much more than a $150ish as the preliminaries to create absorption, there is a lot to be achieved with this outlay. The costs will increase if the Panels are wanted to be kept, then the Panels will need a improved bracing to produce an increased rigidity to the framing. When aesthetics are to become the next stages of consideration, where there may be much more attractive Acoustic Fabrics being selected to cover the trial panels, these Fabrics can cost close to $30 per yard/2. |
if this is a man cave and you’re willing to do some DIY. Get two cases of 703 Owens Corning rigid fiberglass panels. I was able to get mine from a local insulation distributor. Fir Stripping for frame and colored burlap fabric. Some mounting hardware off of Amazon. Truly, a difficulty scale of one on a DIY project. Do some basic research on where to place. I would look at doing both 4 inch and 2 inch panels. It’s important that the fabric use select you can breathe through it. That is why burlap is suggested because of its ability to breathe.You may need to do some fine-tuning here and there, but you were going to have to start here in the first place so, square one it is. |
For the multitude of individuals with an interest in Audio, All decisions made come with a element of unknowing, hence trialling is the most valuable approach, as the experiencing is everything to assist with making a fair evaluation. No one has to be pay to acquire experience, making time is the key to the door. Spending is easy and for many the simplistic method adopted to avoid acquiring new experiences, especially ones that can prove to be valuable and indelible. " Act in haste repent at leisure " is the way to part with ones coffers and make another more satisfied with their side of the arrangement. The OP is well informed of how they can learn more about what is occurring in their listening space, be it there own endeavours or pay to get given a data produced by a visiting service that might mean very little to them. |
I have had a great experience with GIK. The professionalism and guidance is of the highest order and they offer a range of products to fit most budgets and design aesthetic. I agree with @jastralfu, @kofibaffour and @ervikingo. Before spending any $ on any product, learn what your room is doing and needs. Download REW (it’s free) and get a Dayton OmniMic or similar product. They are not expensive and can often be found used. Take measurements with the mic at the listening position and send the MDAT file, your room dimensions, and images of your speaker and listening location to GIK. They will analyze the information and make recommendations. Then you can decide what you can afford, and whether you purchase from them or another vendor or go DIY. I can tell you that having REW data was eye opening. Speaker and listening positioning have a huge impact on what you hear in the room, and even how room treatments are positioned (angled, stacked, corner, middle, etc.) affects the results you get. I measured every change I made and was stunned to see, and then hear, the differences (good and bad) small changes can make. Good luck! |
@keeferdog, @buzz has the answer. And if you don’t feel comfortable using REW right now, even it’s free it’s not trivial to use, start by making a drawing with all the measurements of your room and your speaker placement and send that into GIK and they have a free consulting service. And if you don’t feel comfortable using REW right now, even it’s free it’s not trivia to use, start by making a drawing with all the measurements of your room and your speaker placement and send that into GIK and they have a free consulting service. An REW MDAT file would certainly help a lot, but in lieu of that you can get going without it. Of course, GIK hopes that you will order some bass traps and diffusers from them, and they have good products, but you’re not obligated to and they certainly will give you good advice. |
My room is somewhat similar (13x14) and have got 11 GIK 244s (some with the wood things on the front - I forget what they're called) and other just bass traps. Two stacked in each front corner, three along the front wall in the middle, two at the 1st/2nd reflection points and two on the ceiling. And since my head is pretty close to the back wall, I took a few unused down comforters and folded them into a box to place behind my head. I have quite a good selection of speakers and the treatment seems to work pretty well with just about all of them. Like others have suggested, I'd just contact GIK and send them a photo of your room and they will make suggestions as to which of their products will more than likely work well for your listening room. I bought my treatments a few years back and the prices were reasonable. The shipping sucked, however. |
Unless you look forward to all the time (a lot) and effort with trial and error trying to dial in your room just consult an acoustician. Jeff at HDacoustics is extremely good with smaller rooms and can design the treatments required for a great sounding room. Also a corner set up like mine might give you the best sound with your room being almost square. Good luck! |
keeferdog, |
It'd be good to know what the RT-60 is in the room. A general rule of thumb for hi-fi listening is around 300ms, and fairly even through the frequency band, rising a bit as it goes into the bass. Absorption is best applied in multiple smaller panels rather than large single panels. Break large flat wall surfaces into smaller reflective zones. Tall, thin vertical panels with a mix of diffusive and absorptive properties are ideal, as their edges will scatter sound more horizontally than vertically. One goal is to break up the fewer strong reflections into many more weak reflections that are spaced apart, averaging about one per millisecond reaching your ears. So about 300 reflections before it fades below audibility. That will ensure an open and lively sound that is very neutral and low in room coloration. |
Hello @keeferdog try to call ATS ( Acoustic Panels by ATS Acoustics )
They help me a lot. I used REW to determine what my room was doing and used that information to help ATS tech support better understand my situation, If you do NOT have REW, ATS tech support will also help you. I had done 2 rooms, and they were spot on. if you look at my profile pic, you will see the ATS treatments they had advised me to use Good luck |
Don't buy anything until you do analyses on your room dimensions. https://amcoustics.com/tools/amroc?l=12&w=10&h=9&ft=true&r60=0.6 There is your room in AMROC and it looks pretty good as far as avoiding modes piling up. It also suggests approx 89 sq ft of absorption (Sabines). 2 inch panels for higher frequencies, 6 inch bass traps or thicker if serious. REW is your friend. See this recent thread as well: https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/room-analysis-how You're getting good advice but don't rush to spend money on panels until you understand what you need. I prefer Acoustimac panels because their backsides are solid ply and it makes it easier to mount onto unusual surfaces. GIK is a great company as well. Lots of them out in the wild. OC 703 is typical for high frequencies and Rockwool/fiberglass is typical for bass. (not the pink stuff) |