Room Treatments added, with negative effects..


Hi Folks:
I purchased a set of foam acoustic room treatments and set them up in my listening room. It now seems that the soundstage has collapsed somewhat, and the sound is less ambient, filling the room less. I'm wondering have I overdone the treatments, or placed them incorrectly or maybe I really just didn't need them to begin with. Can anyone offer any advice or thoughts?

I purchased 12 24inch by 24inch panels of ProFoam treatments from Audioadvisor.com which were pretty reasonable at about $150 for the set. I set up four panels behind the speaker position going from left to right at about 20 inches above the floor, and seven panels behind the listening position (three from left to right about 10 inches above the floor and the other four above those from left to right). Side positioning wasn't really possible because I have glass doors on one side and a corridor on the other.

My system is Audio Physic Virgo, Supratek Syrah pre, Blue Circle BC2 monos, Teres 135/OL Silver/Shelter 501mk2 vinyl rig.

I'm keen to hear any comments or advice on how I can improve my use of the room treatments, or whether I just need to scrap them. Thanks!
Outlier.
outlier
For those contemplating such devices, take a look at the "non-linear absorption characteristics" that such devices introduce into your listening room. While most people install these thinking that they are going to help the sonics out, all they do is create even greater irregularities in terms of what you hear. Chances are, not only do you have a screwed up room to begin with, you've now introduced even more irregularities into the equation as frequency changes.

Take a gander at this and then come back and read the rest of this post. For most installations, you'll want to look at the green line on the chart.

RPG Pro Foam Absorption coefficients

If any of you saw that and thought that it looked like a mess in terms of frequency response, think again as it is even worse than what you think. Rather than providing you with room acoustics that would resemble what is provided on that chart, you have to flip it upside down to see what the in-room response would be like. This is due to the fact that they are showing you how much absorption takes place at a given frequency, not the actual "frequency response" that you would hear.

Once you look at it upside down, you can see that these "acoustic treatments" create a very big "suck-out" in the 500 Hz to 1250 Hz range and reduce all frequencies above 1250 Hz to a very noticeable extent. Most everything below appr 400-500 Hz passes through untouched.

As such, the very "life-blood" aka midrange of the music is damped / absorbed and all the artifacts of treble reproduction ( air, spaciousness, harmonic structure ) are reduced. On top of this, the rate of attenuation is NOT linear across the band so you end up with peaks, valleys and ripples as the signal is spread out across various frequencies. Since bass is not affected in the least, the warmth region and bottom end remain consistent with what you had before installing these devices, but now everything sounds thicker, more distant with less "sparkle" up top. Tonal balance has shifted drastically and NOT in a linear manner.

As such, the end result is that you've created another form of acoustic non-linearity in your room and paid $150 for $5 worth of "flimsy molded foam". If you keep spending at this rate and buying devices like this with no real plan of attack or understanding of what you are trying to achieve, your system should be completely unlistenable in no time flat.

Rather than throw your money away on J-U-N-K like that, invest in a book or two by F. Alton Everest and look at your room like you would your system i.e. as a WHOLE. Once you have a better understanding of what is going on, visiting such sites as those put together by Jon Risch for DIY room treatments and acoustic engineers such as Rives Audio will give you the ability to do things yourself and / or get professional help to diagnose what you really need to do. Rather than throwing money away in a random fashion and creating new problems to deal with, you can get to the root of the problem much simpler, faster and cheaper without as many drawbacks or side-effects taking place along the way.

I hope this helps some of you to realize that "audiophile approved" items are not necessarily "good" and that, many times, you can learn / do / build something better yourself for a LOT less money. As i've said before, there IS a place for "specs". That is, so long as one knows how to interpret them AND the manufacturer has presented them in an honest fashion. Sean
>

PS... I think that Agon member "Tom_nice" has various plans for bass traps, room treatments, etc... that also work quite well. You might want to try contacting him for further info. Hopefully he doesn't mind me doing this, as he's offered th same thing himself several times in other room acoustic related threads. I also know that Tom is a "fan" of Everest's books too, as they are about the best that you'll find on the subject for the amount of money spent.
Gbmcleod,

Indeed you are correct in saying that tube traps cannot be placed along the wall & then be forgotten. They must be tuned. I didn't go into that in my post as the main objective there was to introduce him to the product more than teach him how to use it.

Yes, that classic article from J. Peter Moncrieff is a killer article. I have read that article many times. Once again you are right - many people just don't use the traps correctly. Turning them 2" at a time is indeed too much! BTW, that tube trap article is available on ASC's website too: www.acousticsciences.com & click on "articles". Both the 1985 & 1989 papers are there. This is seminal work done w/ tube traps & worth reading every page of.
FWIW.
It is quite obvious that you are used to listening to your room, as well as your system.

Assume a "nearfield" (7-9feet) listening positions adjust your speakers exactly on axis, leave all treaments exactly as they are, and be prepared to hear your system, instead of room reflections and false ambience.

You will also have to use reasonable volume 75-80db or more to attain the precedence affect.
The near field thing will never make proper room acoustics redundant. Headphones will do that. So unless you are prepared to attach your speakers to your head, no amount of near field mumbo jumbo will negate the need to have the best acoustics possible for the room. Getting a good room to start with is probably just as important, but, like most everyone, we don't necessarily have a choice of rooms. To Sumitav: have you any idea how fast sound travels and the fact that it bounces all over the room, whether you are fifteen feet away from the speakers or six? How long do you think you get to hear the first arrival wave?