Ron, what about the fuzzy round pedestal for your goddess of music that I saw in a recent photograph directly in the center of the front wall?
Yes, I am using an ASC TubeTrap as a pedestal.
If you are asking why it is still there if I feel like I don't want any acoustic treatment on the front wall anymore, the answer is because I don't hear that one TubeTrap doing anything sonically. If it's doing a tiny bit of diffusion on the front wall, that's fine with me. I don't hear it, and I need a pedestal for Saraswati.
I think she has quietly been guiding me in this direction over the last few months of room "tuning." It would be easier if she just said offered explicit suggestions.
What led to your decision to not want any treatment on the front wall? I assume it is what you are hearing, but could you be a little bit more specific?
"Decision" sounds too definitive.
I report on a stream-of-consciousness basis my vacillating views on the acoustic treatment question. Over the last few weeks the direction on a net basis has been less treatment on the front wall.
I am trying to solve for whatever sounds more natural to me. If a jazz recording sounds a bit lifeless or over-damped that is not good. If a piano sounds weirdly shrill that is not good.
If a female vocalist sounds edgy compared to how she sounded on a composite memory basis from hearing her many dozens of other times in dozens of other systems that is not good.
If Elton John sounds a bit tired compared to how he sounded many dozens of other times in my systems over the years that is not good.
Using jazz and classical I am trying to triangulate on what sound is the most natural to me. Using rock and pop I am trying to triangulate on my composite memory of how that recording sounds on many different systems, and on many different playbacks on my own systems.
I do not want to "tune" the acoustic treatment or the system to make a bright recording sound not bright, or to make a dull recording sound lively. We are not trying to solve for one recording. So I think it's a process to make the acoustic treatment and the system sound as natural as possible on as many different genres of music and types of recordings as possible.