Your previous home had a completely asymmetrical situation with a ceiling that was slanted from left to right. How bad was that Steve?His acoustician has OEM products that are much better that provides the best solutions
Your previous home had a completely asymmetrical situation with a ceiling that was slanted from left to right. How bad was that Steve?His acoustician has OEM products that are much better that provides the best solutions
What sounded wrong about it?It was far from ideal. Next question
Come again? You had an asymmetrical configuration. That is what Ron is asking about. What about that is off-topic?Stay on topic or stay out of the thread.
Absorption is the right solution to asymmetry. It would have to be broadband which means at least 4 to 5 inches thick.
Diffusion sends those waves to other places. I suspect what comes out from the top of your speaker does not have good timbre compared to what comes out from the front. So I would not use diffusion even though it will look much prettier.
The above assumes you have not created a very dead room already. If you have, then adding more to it on the ceiling would make it even more dead.
Here is what I suggest Ron. Do as MikeL has done. Get a temporary thick pillow and tape it to the ceiling and listen. If it improves things, then you are golden. If not, leave it alone. The psychoacoustics of what you have is quite complex. The ears are the right tool to analyze acoustics above a few hundred hertz.
Come again? You had an asymmetrical configuration. That is what Ron is asking about. What about that is off-topic?
I appreciate the suggestions of each of you, but is there really no consensus as to whether absorption or diffusion more successfully makes a section of wall or a section of ceiling "disappear" acoustically -- as though such section of wall or ceiling were literally not there?
Absorption is the right solution to asymmetry. It would have to be broadband which means at least 4 to 5 inches thick.
Diffusion sends those waves to other places. I suspect what comes out from the top of your speaker does not have good timbre compared to what comes out from the front. So I would not use diffusion even though it will look much prettier.
The above assumes you have not created a very dead room already. If you have, then adding more to it on the ceiling would make it even more dead.
Here is what I suggest Ron. Do as MikeL has done. Get a temporary thick pillow and tape it to the ceiling and listen. If it improves things, then you are golden. If not, leave it alone. The psychoacoustics of what you have is quite complex. The ears are the right tool to analyze acoustics above a few hundred hertz.
Those worried with asymmetrical tilted ceilings should read this article https://www.audioholics.com/room-acoustics/room-reflections-human-adaptation/image_view_fullscreen and regain peace of mind - the figure shows the listening room of Floyd Toole in the late 80's.
In acoustics, broadband means above schroeder transition frequencies. For home spaces, this is usually in the 200 to 300 Hz. Here is what a 4 inch absorber looks like:Broadband at what frequency range Amir? I haven't come across any materials that's evenly absorptive across a broad range when dealing with middle and lower frequencies and just absorbing the top end will mess with the over all balance of the sound.
Getting diffusion which works broadband is even harder than absorbers:Diffusion might be the right approach in his room, you can't say until you've been there and know exactly what you're dealing with.
I don't buy what you say about Mike. It doesn't matter though. I simply offered that Ron can experiment with something like this and hear it for himself. It doesn't matter if he knows or doesn't know his room. He can put the panel up or a replacement absorber and see what difference it makes.Regarding the the pillow test, Mike's situation is very different he's fine tuning a purpose built dedicated listening room that he's had for years and is intimately familiar with. Ron has a major structural problem, in his living room, what's a little pillow going to tell him?
david
Looking around I could not find any listening room with full absorption at the ceiling or someone endorsing full absorption on the ceiling - on the contrary many people use reflectors or diffusers in the ceiling.
The few references about fully absorbing ceiling primary reflections come from the people advising on how to built control rooms. What are the subjective consequences of such approach?
Looking around I could not find any listening room with full absorption at the ceiling or someone endorsing full absorption on the ceiling - on the contrary many people use reflectors or diffusers in the ceiling.
The few references about fully absorbing ceiling primary reflections come from the people advising on how to built control rooms. What are the subjective consequences of such approach?