maybe this tech forum. I go local farm today for second tree for listen room. I bring ram trx with body armor and park way out so nobody damage paint. I look around at premium tree and woman in red sweater she tell me soft- I want you be my lumberjack. I never hear this said but when she insist to help at truck one thing lead to next but tree get mangle with no needle on three side. I think I need go back for new tree I no want no needle tree in room with gear. Maybe this tree good in corner theater with Magico system if help with dispurse sound?
Thank advice. we grind that bush hard in back of truck and both had needle from tree in place I rather not go in on first meet. I have bare tree to good use in corner of theater it well treated and is more memorial holiday bush. Wife love story and we go back for lay more lumber Sunday.
My listening room contains around 15 or so artificial ficus trees. 5-footers. They are scattered around the room in what appears, but is decidedly NOT, random placement. They are VERY EFFECTIVE DIFFUSERS and "fixed" my room acoustics. A live tree would not work well in my basement room even though there are some large windows. But large live houseplants and potted trees might work and be a bit more aesthetically pleasing. Definitely high on the WAF.
I recommend leafy trees, real or artificial, to help room acoustics. I know of others, including a very high end electronics manufacturer, that use large plants and trees to help their room acoustics.
MC, this is getting tired. How long are you going to continue?
It's well known that different types of tree will have different effects on the room acoustic. Let's start a thread about that.
1. The Balsam Fir Tree
2. The Fraser Fir Tree
3. The Canaan Fir Tree
4. The Douglas Fir Tree
5. The Grand Fir Tree
6. The Noble Fir Tree
7. The Concolor Fir
8. The White Pine Tree
9. The Scotch Pine Tree
10. The Virginia Pine Tree
11. The Blue Spruce Tree
12. The Norway Spruce Tree
13. The White Spruce Tree
14. The Arizona Cypress Tree
15. The Leyland Cypress Tree
16. The Red Cedar Tree
I recommend highly 50 year old cheffalaria. Woody, deep warm timber, carbon dioxide free Soundwave transmission. Bests works with tropical instrumental choices. 45 year project now bearing fruit. For more lively music type just add bush babbies.
reminds me, back in the 80s bose advertised its then-new acoustimass system in a room with indoor tree-like plants, the satellites were hidden behind the foliage, and the ad continued, "you may not see them, but you sure can hear them!" or words to that effect.
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