room treatment, where do you start?


an analysis of the room would seem to be the place to start, right? what tools do you need, what do you do first? Buy, or can better tools be rented?; One presumably wouldn't need to use such tools again until you move or change speakers. Do you first calculate the two fundamental room modes mathematically and buy devices to attenuate those? I last tried electronic eq in the 80's, which introduced an undesirable reduction in clarity (tone controls were still popular, then); are analogue eg units as useful as one would expect, substantially better than they once were (I am not interested in taking an analogue signal from LP through an a/d to d/a conversion). I am starting from scratch, understand tuning by ear will be required, want a more or less scientific, targeted approach. It's a rented apartment, so it's impractical to invest in experts, e.g. Rives.
lloydc

Showing 1 response by oakleys

a real good resource is the F. Alton Everest "master handbook of acoustics" whatever version is current.

for economical solutions try homemade bass traps. real easy you can just go to lowes and pick up 4 or so bags full of insulation. next just plop them down in the corners of your room for immediate results, then look into building proper bass traps ala jon risch diy receipe.

doubled up owens-corning 2"thick 2'x4' placed at all 1st reflection points a couple inches off the wall, including the ceiling reflection point, is transformative.

asc has alot of great info available online concerning their take on placement of treatments. the old art norton(whatever his name is) papers are great and free advice.

good luck