bass traps..which wall first


when using bass traps (any kind for this question/answer) which wall should be the priority, the rear corners behind the speaker, to the corners behind the listener? Can 2 different ones be used "safely" for example can you use 4' tall traps behind speakers, and 2' behind listener and vice versa?
jaf2290
Auralex Lenrd traps in the front and rear corners, each 2 foot tall stacked in threes to create 6 foot stacks in the corners, works very well for me. A rug and some furniture and I'm done. I wouldn't want to lose some of the remaining ambience in the room.
I have some rock wool (8lb) four inches thick on the diagonal of the corners behind the speakers. I could not believe the difference it made. I highly reccomend it, especially if you have squarish room dimensions. I haven't personally tried all four corners, but if I could I would definitely do that as well. The other thing to think about is the first reflection from the ceiling. If you have speakers with good dispersion in the tweeter, you should put some damping in high frequencies on the ceiling, in my opinion. Ambience is good, first reflections are bad, again in my opinion.
what are your thoughts on accoustical solutions traps up front (the 4' tall foam ones) and Aurelen Lenrd bass traps in rear (2' tall)

I'd be inclinded to go for the MEGA LENRD's (or equivalent size) if you plan only a total of 12 linear feet of coverage in the corners (4' + 4' + 2' + 2')
shadorne,
im unfamiliar with the MEGA product...how does it differ from regular lenrd's?. would 2 pr of regular lenrds be better? i just not a fan of the "look" of any product in the corners..so i fugured the 2' ones would be best solution
My understanding is that the MEGA LENRD are bigger. Size counts!

The MegaLENRD Bass Trap (Low-End Node Reduction Device) is extremely effective at smoothing out low frequency room nodes and is just a bigger version of the original best-selling bass trap. At twice the width (extending 24" along each wall, not 12" like the standard LENRD,) the bass trap is substantial enough to handle low-frequency problems in rooms of any size and is the only broadband absorber effective below 50Hz.