Room Setup/Tuning/Compensation War Stories


Hi, all! I’m new to this forum, hope to have some fun now that I have joined. As a bit of background, I’ve been exposed to some degree my whole life to the world of hi-fi thanks to my dad, who has always tinkered with sound systems my whole life. Anyhow, I only recently started my own journey into home stereophilia and have had a...fun...time getting my setup optimal. I am curious about the kind of interesting things other people have had to go through and learn from while setting up their own systems!

Well, I might as well start with mine:

When we bought this house back in 2012, as a housewarming gift, my dad handed down to me is JM Lab Electra 926 floorstanders. He wasn’t using them at all, since he preferred his set of Magnepans. For a few years, I used them as part of a rudimentary home theater setup, driven by a Denon surround receiver and paired to a Hsu Research subwoofer. It sounded okay, good enough for occasional movie watching, but really didn’t get all that much use since I preferred to spend my time riding bicycles instead.

Fast forward to late last year, my speakers were collecting dust, as after having two kids, we haven’t really had any time to really watch movies using the home theater, and the speakers have just sat here in our family room behind my work-from-home setup. Well, I recently started getting back into headphones, and had been experimenting with modern DACs, and upon visiting my dad back up in NY and letting him audition my latest DAC purchase (SMSL DO100), he decided to pull his unused PS Audio GCC-100 control amp from the closet and hand it down to me so I could put it to use with the Electras. I was elated! I brought it home, hooked it all up and started playing with speaker placement, and I got it to a place where the highs and mids were wonderfully engaging, spacious, and transparent, with a very natural/flat response in the upper and middle range.

Unfortunately after all that work, I still felt something was off and missing. A lot of the music I tend to listen to has a surprising amount of information in the lower bass and even sub bass range, so I decided to audition a subwoofer in my setup, so I purchased an SVS SB-3000 based on budget as well as reviewer feedback. As I began setting up the sub and blending it into my system, it was at that point, by testing for frequency response going 1Hz at a time, that I discovered that my loudspeakers, at their optimal placement (for highs and mids), were generating a massive room gain in the 40-50Hz range. While I did what I could with the phase adjustment and parametric EQ in the SVS phone app to flatten things out from my critical listening seating position, I was still not satisfied with the way things were configured. After a bunch of research, I decided that the better solution may be to utilize a crossover to completely high-filter off my main loudspeakers and redirect the affected bass range to only the sub.

So I tried this initially by purchasing a Bluesound POWERNODE N330 streamer amp, and used its built-in crossover to high-pass the mains and redirect everything to the sub. Well guess what? It worked! I was able to get a much more even frequency response curve from my system, the bottom end now just sounded so much more natural, and I noticed the mids opened up to some degree as well. However, something else was lost in the process. The highs lost some air, and imaging had narrowed. There was also seemingly a degree of loss of resolution to the overall sound. I guess the NAD amplification circuitry in the POWERNODE was simply not up to the quality of the PS Audio GCC-100 I had been using up until now--it was not likely a DAC issue because I was still using the SMSL DAC, just running it into the analog input of the POWERNODE (although admittedly, I am using balanced XLR hookup for the GCC-100, which is supposed to be better than the RCA to 3.5mm setup with the POWERNODE). What to do?

Well, I ended up deciding to try going a more old-school route. I removed the POWERNODE from the equation, I purchased a pair of 80Hz, 12db/octave roll-off high--pass filters and rigged them up between my GCC-100 and the loudspeakers, and then used the subwoofer’s interface to blend the system together.

Eureka at last! I got all of the benefits of the original setup, the open and air sound stage, the resolution, the transparency, the punch, the absolute transparency, but no more massive room gain in the 40-50Hz, it was now all so natural, so flat, so smooth. Perfection at last.

Oh but what a learning experience, and what a journey!

Now...let’s hear your war stories!

-Ed

eddnog

It’s the internet. You’ll always run into this type. I just ignore the noise. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 

-Ed

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My "stereo" room has only three walls that open to a kitchen as well as the hall to the rest of the house. My house has a lot of hard surfaces, so the echo is like a racquet ball court. It is too severe for just using a rug and furnishings. My naive first step was a primacoustic panel kit as suggested by the company. It was not nearly enough to even notice a difference. Another issue was my speakers at the time (JBL 4367) had limited bass within that room. Upon measuring with REW, there is no good way to implement full range speakers in my room with even bass. I purchased a pair of REL s510s, but struggled to situate them using the instruction booklet.

Around 2021, I found Nyal of Acoustic Frontiers in San Fransisco. Using phone, email and google drive, Nyal directed me on a number of acoustic measurements. I first had to make a blueprint of the listening room and kitchen, along with providing photographs. He helped me optimize the position of the subwoofers, but that model proved too small for my speakers and too limited in adjustment. I was able to flatten the bass up to 60Hz, but getting rid of a large 60Hz resonance was not possible.  I purchased JL audio f113s and their CR1, which fixed the bass.

For the second step, Nyal proposed a package of panels as well as their mounting locations. This included ceiling panels and six panels on a kitchen wall. I was put off by adding anything to the kitchen, but actually it worked out. They are vicoustic VMT panels, which blend in well. I also picked out the cloth for absorption and diffusing/bass trap panels for the wall. The cloth matches the paint. It is a nice geometric design. Visitors actually compliment it, but I am sure they think I am weird. I installed them all myself, which was quite a job. I will say a laser-level is a must-have luxury for this process.

The room sounded much better, of course. There was no change in tonal balance, really just a large decrease in reverberation time.  There was a remaining issue with a resonance in the upper midrange I could not cure. It was a like gong go off on certain notes. I could decrease it with positioning, cabling, electronics etc., but it was always there. So I sold the 4367s.  They are great speakers but they weren't for my setup. I was frustrated and wanted to move on to something easier, less ambitious. I will say the most underrated aspect of those speakers are the woofers. The bass is so articulate.

I moved on to TAD ME1, which I bought used.  They are a little dry in the HF, but very pleasant sound speakers. They are more challenging to integrate in to my room as the bass rolls off earlier than I had anticipated. First I re-setup the subs in mono with DARO. I had move the TADs as well as the listening distance from the front wall many times before finding a position of both at the same time where the bass would fill in between 50- 150Hz. I also tweaked the damping and xover frequency on the CR1 to juice up that range as well. Then I used a laser measurement to mirror the distance between the two speakers and the listening position.  That whole setup took about nine hours, which way less than number of hours I had already put in...hundreds of measurements. The sound is so pretty and relaxing, now. I do miss the 4367 woofers, though. The E1 and CE1 would better speakers for me, but I do not care enough to spend the money. I have other things going on in my life right now.  

I highly recommend Acoustic Frontiers. There is a lot of value for those of use with room challenges, in my opinion. Nyal is very thoughtful and professional. Understanding room acoustic basics is not hard but an acoustic plan is complex. 

 

 

 

 

Thanks @ohlala for that incredible story. I admit you’ve definitely put in more effort than I. Since my two sons are only 4 and 6, I’m not willing to overly invest in room treatments because as my kids grow, so too will our home evolve. Great story though, and appreciate you really nailing the spirit of the thread!

-Ed