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Make Your Room Sound AMAZING! Audio Treatment Step-by-Step Guide

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The Headphone Show

The Headphone Show

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 218
@realgrilledsushi
@realgrilledsushi Жыл бұрын
It all started with reading comments that iems sounded better than airpods. Now you’re rearranging speakers in your bedroom.
@Kjrov
@Kjrov Жыл бұрын
Dankpods ruined my wallet
@truman4956
@truman4956 2 күн бұрын
This is buy far the best explanation on acoustic analysis, speaker setup and room treatments I’ve come across.
@lukedudgeon8699
@lukedudgeon8699 6 ай бұрын
Great video. Cant deny im a little envious that your listening room is about the size of athird of my entire house.
@pablohrrg8677
@pablohrrg8677 5 ай бұрын
And that the speakers are as expensive as all your furniture.
@lostintechnology1851
@lostintechnology1851 3 ай бұрын
@@pablohrrg8677he could have just gotten objectively better gear for a fraction of the money as well and spend more on room treatment
@johnenglishIII
@johnenglishIII Жыл бұрын
One of the most valuable lesson in the speaker world: your system will only sound as good as your room does. My living room is not treated (can't do it and don't want it either) and understanding this has saved me a bunch of money on upgrading components, since it now sounds pretty much as good as it gests for my space. Nice video!
@pure_awareness
@pure_awareness 7 ай бұрын
Help me understand why
@johnenglishIII
@johnenglishIII 7 ай бұрын
@@pure_awareness the sound coming from unwanted reflections from the wall and ceiling, arrives at a different timing to your ears. This echo effect makes things sound muddy and less clear. This has more impact on sound quality than Dacs or amps.
@sarkardragon
@sarkardragon 6 ай бұрын
Grear video, precise, direct, full of information, all that is hard to get out there. Many KZbinrs want to sell something, create so many long videos, and some times we just want the raw information. This make all the diference
@juanfarrell1088
@juanfarrell1088 6 ай бұрын
By far the best video I've watched on the subject. Thanks man, your delivery is clear and concise, without the exasperating mannerisms a lot of KZbinrs regurgitate for engagement. Cheers 💪🏽
@Oneness100
@Oneness100 6 ай бұрын
This is filled with disinformation. The best channel that I have found that gives the best advice and articulates how to treat a room is Acoustic Fields. this guy's room has NOT been treated properly.
@econautx
@econautx 5 ай бұрын
@@Oneness100Please give an example, thanks.
@Oneness100
@Oneness100 5 ай бұрын
@@econautx This is a custom built room that's one of the best I've seen. Look at the thickness of the walls, ceiling, etc. The reasoning behind that is that the structure turns into a low frequency absorption so you only need acoustic foam panels for the mid's and high's. Diffusion from front and rear. kzbin.info/www/bejne/m36vcmieZdObbtU
@Oneness100
@Oneness100 5 ай бұрын
​@@econautx How to deal with low frequencies under 100Hz. I would never put the low frequency absorption in just the corners, as that's not enough surface coverage. What he should have said is to put the room dimensions in AMROC and only look at the Axial Modes and treat those first. Those are going to be the biggest problem area and if you fix the Axial model, you are fixing the other modes at the same time. If you put corner traps, you simply aren't going to fix an Axial mode. Axial modes are unwanted pressure between 2 parallel surfaces. That means the low frequency PRESSURE problem is going to be along the entire surface. So, if the lowest low frequency problem in your room starts at 30Hz, and it's along "an example" the side walls, then you would need to find a product with the highest amount of absorption coefficient at 30Hz and get enough to cover at least 50% to 70% of the entire surface covered. Sticking some "traps" in the corners is NOT going to fix low frequency problems in a room as it's not enough surface coverage. It will a very small amount of difference and that's because they are only covering maybe 5% of the surface coverage, at most. Plus, I'm not sure the units he used are all that good at absorption in the low frequencies in that room. So, wrong product, wrong amount and wrong placement. Also, his terminology seems rather mis leading, and it's not his fault, it's the industries as there's a lot of wrong terminology used. Bass Traps is the incorrect terminology. the industry has practically standardized on that term, but it's simply an incorrect term. The correct term would be low frequency absorption device, and depending on the type of design of the unit. There are three main types of low frequency absorption type devices. Membrane, Diaphragmatic and Helmholtz. Helmholtz is for SPECIFIC frequencies, but the problem is they simply don't absorb enough at the frequency a unit is designed to absorb. then the other problems with Helmholtz is you are going to need a lot of them, and in most cases, the problem is not at one frequency, it's at many DIFFERENT frequencies. Membrane and Diaphragmatic are from a similar family of absorption, but between the two, I would go with Diaphragmatic as if designed properly with the right materials, you'll get much more absorption at lower frequencies than a membrane. Yes, they are typically more costly, but they typically will be heavier as they have more mass to absorb more low frequency energy. So, on a per square foot basis, you'll absorb more per sq foot, so you can fix a problem better. Also, he talks about reflections and they starts talking about ECHO's and Reverberation in a room. Echo don't exist in a room. An echo is a repeating sound. Think of what happens if you go to a large Canyon and you yell out "Hello" and you hear the word "hello" repeating until it fades away. That's an echo. A reverberation you won't hear the word repeating. You'll just hear the energy bouncing off the walls until they die away.
@Kenny-Somafunk
@Kenny-Somafunk Жыл бұрын
Good video, it always astounds me how folk can pay hundreds of £ on useless cables/tweaks and thousands of £ on equipment and sit it in a room with terrible acoustics whilst pontificating about sound quality. I had a budget of £7k for my room/system and spent £3k on gik very similar to yourself and the rest on Dynaudio Lyd 48 + 18s subwoofer and a CXN v2 streamer along with a Umik mic and implementation of roon peq, very happy with the resulting sound.
@CobraChamp
@CobraChamp 4 ай бұрын
Absolutely one of the best room correction videos on KZbin! Well done!!!
@andynonimuss6298
@andynonimuss6298 5 ай бұрын
Well done! Most of everything you said is correct, but the advice on the best Listening Position being at 38% is incorrect. The so-called 38% rule was ONLY ever meant to be a general guideline. It doesn't work universally because it doesn't take the room LENGTH into account. For smaller length rooms a Listening Position of 45.8% is going to be a common position. For a medium-length room, it might be closer to 39.6%, and for a longer room, it might be closer to 32.8%, etc. And technically 38% is a bad position because it's very close to the 4th null located at 37.5%. The correct position is 39.6% which is located between the 4th null at 37.5% and the 6th null at 41.7% (37.5 + 41.7 /2 = 39.6%).
@briandunn957
@briandunn957 Жыл бұрын
Great video! However will just say that flat anechoic frequency response is the ideal, but in-room it sounds more natural and appealing to not have flat so much as a tilting downward-right so the bass is about 5dB~ higher than treble on a straight downward slope. Look at the "Spinorama" graphs for estimated in-room response for an anechoic flat speaker (eg Ascend Sierra-LX) to see what this looks like. Perfectly "flat" in the room can sound pretty "flat" and dull, not very robust.
@SireEvalish
@SireEvalish 8 ай бұрын
I believe there's a Harman curve equivalent for speakers that's basically what you say, that is a slope with bass slightly boosted while treble is rolled off.
@chronometa
@chronometa Жыл бұрын
I need this for headphones
@djhmax09
@djhmax09 Жыл бұрын
Underrated comment here lol
@Mudinyeri
@Mudinyeri 6 ай бұрын
Excellent primer on the subject. One thing that I have not seen addressed in videos on room optimization/treatment is open floor plans. Most newer homes, at least in the U.S., are build with areas or "moments" rather than rooms, per se. For example, my listening area is about 12' X 12' but it is open to an area (bar/kitchenette) behind it that is about the same size, an area (game/billiards/darts area) to its left that is about 20' X 14' and has a French door to its right. There are no walls on which treatments can be placed. I have installed wood diffusers on the front wall, but don't have side walls, exactly, where additional treatments could be installed. Keep up the good work!
@drplot1
@drplot1 4 ай бұрын
if you don't have walls in a traditional room that might be a good thing since you don't have walls in the listening area off which sound will bounce. You can make sure the floor has rugs or carpet and if you notice reverberation you could add treatments to ceiling. The idea is to block surfaces from which sound will bounce
@DoingEvil01
@DoingEvil01 Жыл бұрын
This is incredible information! This has to be about the best 'audio room treatment' information on KZbin. Thanks for this! Now I have a summer project.
@Patagoona
@Patagoona Жыл бұрын
"1. Bass traps don't fix bass modes. As Dr. Toole says in one of his private presentations, "the only thing bass traps do is trap your money!" Wavelengths are way too large for any traditional velocity absorbers to do much good. Often people put a ton of them in there to get results and with it, make their room too dead. In general, few if any people are in a position to use velocity absorbers to make effective changes in their room. Pressure absorbers work better but they are expensive and require skill to design and use (they are very frequency selective). 2. He is optimizing for his eyes, not ears. Two ears and a brain don't work like a single microphone and a graph as Dr. Toole would again say. The notion that reflections are "bad" is folklore as comprehensive peer reviewed has repeatedly shown. Yet, it has become one of the "internet rules" to chase them using measurements. Doing so will lead to a completely dead room when you are done. Ask any high-end acoustician what the #1 problem with DIY acoustic is and they tell you people creating dead rooms because of this mistake. 2A. Use speakers with proper directivity and you will not need to fear reflections. Indeed, this is your #1 tool for good sound in a room. 3. Rooms are never ideal. The calculators for room modes and such for the most part generate incorrect results because your walls are not perfect reflectors. Ditto then for golden ratios, and this and that dimensions not being good. Read Dr. Toole's book for example measurements showing this. For this reason, you can actually fill nulls a bit because cancellation unlike what he claims are way away from ideal (or they would not be down just a few dB). 4. Reflectors need to be broadband. Those skyline diffusers are not. And neither are a lot of what you folks slap on walls. Minimum depth should be 4 inches. 5. DSP is extremely powerful. Get the right speakers, put them more or less where you like, and set your seating position the same. Then measure and apply DSP to pull down peaks. This is the formula which will give you 90% of the results with minimum expense and uglification factor (slapping panels everywhere in the room). Sadly the folklore has gotten so bad that if you don't have a room full of acoustic panels, folks think something wrong with your room. What is really wrong is that people haven't spend $35 on Dr. Toole's book and a few days of reading and learning about real sound acoustics. Please, please do not follow the Internet consensus on this. They are just wrong." - Amir, audiosciencereview.com
@lrama6999
@lrama6999 Жыл бұрын
@@Patagoona Dr Toole is a Tool and your comment is absolute nonsense as anyone from the pro audio world knows you’re absolutely wrong 😂
@lrama6999
@lrama6999 Жыл бұрын
@@Patagoona it’s ridiculous, you read one book and you think you’re an expert! You are what’s wrong with the internet mate 😂 the sheer ignorance is astounding
@thepickyaudiophile
@thepickyaudiophile Жыл бұрын
Except DSP usually sound shit above 500hz and can’t address decay time (ok ok, the bleeding edge hardly out yet is starting too, especially if you have more than 2 speakers). But sure, lets all listen to the 🙉🙈
@briandunn957
@briandunn957 Жыл бұрын
In normal living spaces for normal people without dedicated rooms, furniture like couches, chairs, bookshelves, etc. functions as the treatments. Yes, starting with an empty room and no furniture means you'll need other ways to make it less echoy. And remember that it's subjective and the amount of echo that is acceptable is a very subjective personal preference. Some people want "dead" sounding rooms that are more like headphones. Some people don't mind or even prefer varying level of liveliness left in the room.
@kamerafi
@kamerafi Жыл бұрын
I can relate to the latter. There's no way I can stand sitting inside of a mini anechoic chamber for long. Cozy theme and furnitures are a must as well.
@DoartYT
@DoartYT Ай бұрын
This video was not only helpful and isnightful, but also very entertaining in trying to recognize the album covers behind you. I see: Daft Punk Woodkid Alt-J Tash Sultana Mother Mother Pink Floyd Gorillaz The Script My Chemical Romance Tame Impala Good taste! 🎉
@dr806
@dr806 Жыл бұрын
Kudos for making this video! I do have one item to point out. The modes between parallel walls start at a frequency that has a wavelength 2 times the distance between them and at the integer multiples of that lowest frequency. So, instead of 7m for the room described, one would want to use 14m for the wavelength of the first modal frequency.
@truman4956
@truman4956 2 күн бұрын
Great explanation although I’ve always found I get the best results by setting up the speakers on the longest wall.
@drunksaru
@drunksaru Жыл бұрын
Fantastic! I've attempted room treatment many times but never had the cool tools like in this video. It was tough and at times, took months for me to figure things out. I think it might be an interesting series if you guys did Room treatment challenges. Choose people with oddly shaped rooms or unique furniture layouts and do a room treatment and see what kind of challenges you had, etc. Also knowing how much it cost each time to get to a certain level would be very interesting to see. Oh and also doing comparisons with other products that claim auto room correction too and measuring those and seeing the difference. I was quite impressed with Sony's HT-A9 when it auto adjusted everything in a few minutes for the size of the speakers but it's also a different experience. Room Treatment is hard and expensive.. which is why I usually stick to headphones. LOL
@eskamobob8662
@eskamobob8662 Жыл бұрын
No idea if it would be doable, but that room treatment challange idea is amazing tbh
@astorbeijer9424
@astorbeijer9424 Жыл бұрын
If you have to ask how much it costs; you can't afford it. Seriously, I looked into purchasing room treatments for my office, which is the size of most people's bathroom. I was looking at a minimum of $2k when all was said and done.
@neilduerden1273
@neilduerden1273 Жыл бұрын
Do mine! A mezzanine with stone floors below and stone walls. Reflection heaven. The hifi is on the elevated level and the ceiling is a triangle. Reflectiontastic!
@CrochetNewsNetwork
@CrochetNewsNetwork 8 ай бұрын
Excellent idea
@CrochetNewsNetwork
@CrochetNewsNetwork 8 ай бұрын
⁠@@astorbeijer9424this is just a guess, I I would surmize that 10 to 20% of your entire audio budget be spent on room treatment and the gear necessary to get accurate readings. It really depends on what the room is.
@Nearest_Neighbor
@Nearest_Neighbor Ай бұрын
Did you actually ended up making that video about room correction? I couldn't find it scrolling through your timeline. Great video on the matter btw. One you can share with others too get them understanding it.
@TM-fx2pi
@TM-fx2pi 11 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT video! Thank you. More like this please!
@paulk9534
@paulk9534 8 ай бұрын
Really really superb explanation… many thanks🎉
@electreelife
@electreelife Жыл бұрын
This is by far the best explanation I’ve seen out there. Thanks!
@kitkit6610
@kitkit6610 Жыл бұрын
Gik acoustic treatment, goat
@vamp366
@vamp366 7 ай бұрын
Awesome awesome video! Gave me everything I needed to start my room treating journey. Thank you so much!
@eruilluvitar
@eruilluvitar Жыл бұрын
Sweet guide!
@danboy77
@danboy77 Жыл бұрын
People don’t realise the chair you sit on affects the sounds substantially. I have Meridian speakers which sounds amazing but sitting on my leather chesterfield causes major problems in sound unfortunately particularly in the bass.
@kyron42
@kyron42 Жыл бұрын
So place your speakers in the ideal position and position furniture where you can fit it.
@TombstoneTube
@TombstoneTube 5 ай бұрын
Killer set up and room
@MuhammadKharismawan
@MuhammadKharismawan 9 ай бұрын
I only need 10 minutes with my Swan OS10 inside my room to understand that I've been missing a lot from my 7 years of headphone hobby. After that I stopped looking much into headphones and IEMs deals and just buy a KEF LSX and a sub for it. It's just doing something all three of my over 1000 usd headphones and IEMs can't ever do.
@Qthepug
@Qthepug Жыл бұрын
Very good. Just the video needed.
@Odyofil
@Odyofil Жыл бұрын
This was perfectly told 🎉
@giuseppeongano7862
@giuseppeongano7862 8 ай бұрын
Nice picture of cheers with western Electric tubes, when I can find it? ...or only the image.
@Sysshad
@Sysshad 21 күн бұрын
How about Foam Panels, i see many uses them. And how about placing them behind the speakers on the wall, some say that removes sound that bounces back to the wall
@stevemd8947
@stevemd8947 7 ай бұрын
I own B&W 801 matrix series 3 speakers. My room is 10'H x 14.5'W x 27.5L. I cannot use any front wall treatments as I will suck the life out of the mid-range and treble. Also, I have only one 4 ' x 2' absorption panel on the ceiling. Two panels sucked the life out of my speakers. So, listening is very important in optimizing the sound of your room.
@vinylrules4838
@vinylrules4838 5 ай бұрын
I get absorption sucking the life out of your music, but diffusion should not suck the life out.
@matiaserp
@matiaserp Жыл бұрын
Very nice video. But... A flat in room frequency response? Must be sounding very bright! Try aiming for -0.8 dB/octave instead.
@matthewharrington5526
@matthewharrington5526 Күн бұрын
Question. I have a 120” projector screen on the main wall and have my speakers (Dynaudio Heritage) in same area (I can pull them out quite far). Would the screen be good for sound treatment or would you say I should get panels to put on wall as well? Also I have curtains on one side wall. Would that be fine for that side? Thanks!!
@ramlord6669
@ramlord6669 Жыл бұрын
Really a great lecture about room treatment and its effects! I enjoyed it. It seems you are not only a headfi guy but also a hifi guy. That's great 🙃 Would like to watch more of you testing hifi gear too. This beautifull snow white Sopra 3 and your equipment in the rack could be the interception of this second path 🤗
@chuopskivlog
@chuopskivlog Жыл бұрын
I've got a question about 'perfect' frequency response. You've shown a flat one, but I found theories that perfect harman target in room looks more like +5dB bass, flat mids -5dB trebles
@patrickmiller4987
@patrickmiller4987 Жыл бұрын
You are correct, MOST will not prefer a flat in room response! He should have mentioned this so as not to confuse people! It will sound bass light, and bright to most. We dont hear the flat response as flat and even.
@christophhofer303
@christophhofer303 10 ай бұрын
thanks alot, great video
@mcfIy
@mcfIy Жыл бұрын
Wow! That’s an impressive room setup and the information in this video is extremely valuable. Thank you Cameron, as well as @TheHEADPHONEShow for providing such high quality contend! I’am very much looking forward to these upcoming videos in this series. Enjoy the fruits of your labor @GoldenSound 🎶
@AbsoluteFidelity
@AbsoluteFidelity Жыл бұрын
Your final measurements after dsp seem to indicate a very linear response which looks great but shouldnt that have a downward tilt as such a linear response at the MLP is considered bright? Was this a personal choice to try emulate a typical recording studio response? Also, the very slight dip between 200hz to 300hz wasnt fixable with DSP?
@BlackthorneSoundandCinema
@BlackthorneSoundandCinema Жыл бұрын
Great video. This video does a really good job illustrating exactly why I invested more money into my headphones than speakers. Speakers are superior to headphones IMO, but not in the rooms in my house!
@boomShadyd
@boomShadyd Жыл бұрын
Hey. Great video. Where did you get that 300b poster at the end?
@luckyupyours
@luckyupyours Жыл бұрын
Is your recommended RT60 time derived from the two commonly used standards for such - ISO 3382 and EBU/ITU? The ISO standard specifies an RT60 of ~500 ms and EBU/ITU specifies between 200-400 ms. Also, you should have mentioned that furniture can actually act as room treatment if you have enough of it. My bedroom, untreated, has a RT60 of around 350 ms with only a king size bed, a desk, and a dresser in it.
@guystpierrecomposer
@guystpierrecomposer Жыл бұрын
Very good advise! I would add... every room is different. In my professional studio, I'm set up pretty like in this video. In my living room (where I can't put absorption where I want) the speakers are a lot better in the other way. Because the room is very large, there is less first reflection to the left and right of the speakers and fortunately my back wall have intrusion (stairways, kitchen and entry)
@camoturtle18
@camoturtle18 2 ай бұрын
1:20 cool poster! Where did you get it?
@genkifd
@genkifd Жыл бұрын
should actually try different degrees of toe in as not all speakers recommend toe in
@patrickmiller4987
@patrickmiller4987 Жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@JamesWilliams-gf8gm
@JamesWilliams-gf8gm Жыл бұрын
Wow very nice room. I bet it is hard to go back to headphones. I have JBL 4367s on McIntosh gear with JL subs highpassed at 60hz and my headphones get very little use these days. Great video
@Dimitris_Pappas
@Dimitris_Pappas Жыл бұрын
Great video! Looking forward to watching the acoustic development of your room. I'm particularly interested to see your acoustic treatment of your back wall. Keep up the good work!
@imosolar
@imosolar 10 ай бұрын
Great review but how can one add all room treatment in a family room, please what's the minimum section of treatment?
@dragonstone6594
@dragonstone6594 7 ай бұрын
Dude, I'm telling you, you fuckin nailed this topic! Amazing work. Thanks!
@asan1050
@asan1050 Жыл бұрын
ThanksMuch!..yes sir
@bena8287
@bena8287 Жыл бұрын
Best video you have made.
@spazzychalk
@spazzychalk 5 ай бұрын
I have a couple 100 pound dogs, things get very dusty and dirty fast. I want to avoid foam and fabric that will become disgusting allergen traps. What are my treatment options?
@debontehond22
@debontehond22 7 ай бұрын
@goldensound your wall with music looks cool. Can you share how you did this?
@kolgrillarn
@kolgrillarn 9 ай бұрын
So, when are you coming to persude my wife to let me do some of this in the living room 😢? Nice video!👍
@patrickmiller4987
@patrickmiller4987 Жыл бұрын
That FR does not look like it sounds great to me but if you like it good for you.
@Jason-sr3pr
@Jason-sr3pr Жыл бұрын
Tip: a set of furniture floor sliders (can be bought at any decent hardware store) are very useful when making frequent moves of bigger speakers during a process like this.
@silkroad1201
@silkroad1201 Жыл бұрын
My "room" is my living room in an open style house with an angled ceiling, a square room to the left, a rectangular room to the right, a bird house shaped dining room and a square kitchen. All mixed between carpet and hardwood 🤦‍♂️
@juliangst
@juliangst Жыл бұрын
The new Dirac Active Room Treatment correction could potentially replace big bass absorbers. It uses all speakers to basically cancel any unwanted reflections up to 150Hz. It also will support higher frequencies in the future.
@MODAC
@MODAC Жыл бұрын
Nope.
@juliangst
@juliangst Жыл бұрын
@@MODAC yes
@MODAC
@MODAC Жыл бұрын
@@juliangst not nearly as effective
@juliangst
@juliangst Жыл бұрын
@@MODAC we don't know much yet but the waterfall graphs look very promising
@lrama6999
@lrama6999 Жыл бұрын
Nope and it only takes an understanding of physics and a look at other active bass trapping devices 🤷‍♂️
@westensanchez9483
@westensanchez9483 10 ай бұрын
How do you treat a ceiling when you use it to bounce atmos signals?
@lnwatts
@lnwatts 7 ай бұрын
What are those things on the wall, behind you. Obviously, they are album art but what, exactly are they? And where can I get some?
@boydsargeant7496
@boydsargeant7496 6 ай бұрын
Wow!
@ofri925
@ofri925 6 ай бұрын
Great video, but you definitely cannot fix a room mode with DSP. DSP cannot affect decay times.
@CrochetNewsNetwork
@CrochetNewsNetwork 8 ай бұрын
QUESTION; I have very good audio (b&w diamonds-devaliet power -REL subs) how do I find and hire a guy like you??? I now have a dedicated audio room, I have excellent musical ears from being a session player and producer in LA, but I have low technical skills on the mathematics and analyzing room acoustics. I can Google but whom am I looking for with such excellent skills as yours? I have a budget for acoustic treatment and to hire an expert. Are you referred to as an acoustician? I really need someone like you with your knowledge base to set my room up properly or else I will only be getting 50% of what my gear is capable of. SUGGESTION PLEASE. I would be quite grateful if you can point me in the right direction. I now live in Georgia USA.
@snmdair
@snmdair Жыл бұрын
I love that 300B picture.
@labalo5
@labalo5 Жыл бұрын
That’s awesome. I need that too where can I get it GS?
@fishinthejar
@fishinthejar Жыл бұрын
Holly, I've dreamt of a guide like that coming from you guys! Great video Golden, this will come in handy, thank you!
@syanhc
@syanhc Жыл бұрын
Excellent video.
@GadZookz
@GadZookz Жыл бұрын
Great video with good, practical advice. When you talk about what was intended, do you mean intended by the speaker makers?
@dennischauhan_dc2964
@dennischauhan_dc2964 8 ай бұрын
i have glass wall on my left side of the room pretty much all rooms have glass on corners or a whole wall and i have no clue how will it work in my room if i treat it will the sound bounce back lol what does a glass do
@Superman54
@Superman54 5 ай бұрын
I placed my speakers with the window between them. I figured....it's acoustic properties are different from the other walls....so it'll be uneven....it really was. I rearranged mt speakers and the center image tightened up, no more off balance Soundstage.
@razzman2987
@razzman2987 6 ай бұрын
Did u work for it 😊
@axeldeeker5644
@axeldeeker5644 Жыл бұрын
Big thanks to Jesco, Music city acoustics and the folks at HPS for making this topic accessible!
@audiorick841
@audiorick841 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@HobbyTalk
@HobbyTalk Жыл бұрын
So many steps haha
@stefanhansen5882
@stefanhansen5882 8 ай бұрын
Amazing video! Quick question: How large a percentage of the entire system price is the room treatment? Thanks!
@gurratell7326
@gurratell7326 7 ай бұрын
Tbh it can be done for almost nothing. I have a pair of absorbers behind my speakers that I build from an old mattress, a few planks of wood and some subtle but good looking fabric. Cost me around 10 euro. A whole room will of course cost more, but if you're into diy then you can still do it for a very low cost :)
@stefanhansen5882
@stefanhansen5882 7 ай бұрын
​@@gurratell7326 I do not agree. Look at recording studios, and you'll see that good treatment is costly. I mattress here and there will not make a room any way near perfect.
@rdoursenaud
@rdoursenaud Ай бұрын
@@gurratell7326 If you DIY don't forget to take fire hazard precautions and research materials properties. You don't want to burn everything down because you've used the wrong material. I see quite dangerous advice all the time.
@who_is_dis
@who_is_dis 6 ай бұрын
Renting is a pain in the ass with a home studio. Honestly... If you or anyone could throw out some tips on that, it would be cool.
@howardskeivys4184
@howardskeivys4184 10 ай бұрын
I once watched a program where a professional chef demonstrated the correct way to make mashed potatoes. “Peel the potatoes and dump into a tub of iced water. 2 to 4 hours later, remove the potatoes from tub of iced water and place in a pan of boiling water for 10 minutes. Then return the potatoes to a tub of fresh iced water for a further 2 to 4 hours. Then empty the potatoes into a pan of boiling water. Allow the potatoes to boil for a further 10 minutes, or soft. Drain. Add seasoning, milk and butter to taste. Mash using a fork, then serve”! I, peel the spuds. Place in a pan of water. Bring to the boil. Simmer for 20 minutes or until soft. Add seasoning milk and butter. Then use a potato masher to Finnish the job. I challenge anyone to sample the finished product and be able to differentiate between my offering and that of the professional chef. I think you get the point!!!
@dsabarots
@dsabarots Жыл бұрын
I have very good speakers cables (Audioquest Rocket 88). If I change the room setup I wont be able to put series cables but regular ones (one speaker will require 50ft long cable) Is it worth it to change? Cables are not more important than setup, right
@rdoursenaud
@rdoursenaud Ай бұрын
Your speaker cables are not important at all unless they are too thin to properly carry the required current. Their length doesn't matter much either as long as you're not in the hundreds of meters range. It's been demonstrated several times.
@johnydazzles1
@johnydazzles1 Жыл бұрын
I'm mainly a headphones guy and I have never been able to listen to nice speakers in a well treated room. At this point I'm scared to because I think it might change me. >.
@RussMootsey
@RussMootsey 16 күн бұрын
14:46 bro's clapping differently in each clip 🤣come on guy be a bit more honest
@0rogontorogon
@0rogontorogon Жыл бұрын
Has goldensound won the lottery recently? This is serious money, nevermind all the high end headphone stuff.
@deadline7610
@deadline7610 Жыл бұрын
Nicely Done. Since you don't plan on answering any comments on this platform I'll leave it at that.
@miker718
@miker718 Жыл бұрын
I was very interested in this video, as my home theater is in my basement, which is not ideal. I had a water issue a while back, so the carpeting and furniture had to be removed. I now have an old tiled floor, which was under the wall to wall carpet that got ruined, no furniture, except a recliner, old wood paneling walls, and a less than 7 foot ceiling. It sounds absolutely horrendous. Since I'm on a tight limited budget, and I didn't see anything in the video that addressed using drapes on the walls, or other similar products, could that be a solution? Any other types of treatment suggestions?
@djhmax09
@djhmax09 Жыл бұрын
Those aren't solutions. Thick curtains will absorb high frequency sound but to a very narrow degree. There are two problems in a room: pressure and reflections. Drapes don't solve either of those because they're simply not designed for that. You have to look at the rate, level, and material in acoustics. And for a home theater system, you require more pressure based treatment because of the high amounts of low frequency energy being released by subs. The more drivers there are the more energy there will be and the more problematic your room will be.
@joonasvahasalo6635
@joonasvahasalo6635 10 ай бұрын
Good video but ... rt60 is not usable in small rooms. Its intended for MUCH larger spaces. Just focus on waterfall in small rooms
@codgerfiasco
@codgerfiasco Жыл бұрын
Why didn't Trinnov get a mention? Isn't it still the gold standard of room correction? Or has that been suplanted?
@lrama6999
@lrama6999 Жыл бұрын
Trinnov is the golden standard of EQing your speakers. Proper acoustics can not be replaced with a dsp box, no matter how much people want to believe that 🤣
@codgerfiasco
@codgerfiasco Жыл бұрын
@@lrama6999 Aw bless you and your pseudo flex. Everyone knows that you treat a room before applying correction. Pat on the head. I was talking about the bit where he was listing various DSP room correction software specifically.
@lrama6999
@lrama6999 Жыл бұрын
@@codgerfiasco it’s not a pseudo flex it’s a very important difference 🤷‍♂️
@slofty
@slofty Жыл бұрын
@@lrama6999 Firstly, EQ speakers ≠ EQ room / room correction. Second, having speaker low in directivity errors that have good off-axis linearity will behave well in otherwise challenging rooms such that treatments are largely pointless. Even then, the only real point in doing corrections per REW/Dirac/etc is to tidy up what's below the Schroeder/transition frequency
@lrama6999
@lrama6999 Жыл бұрын
@@slofty … Ok bud 1. No that is still incorrect 2. You are right that the best use for any EQ is in the low end (Schroeder frequency explanation highly inaccurate but nice try) however every speaker will cause reflections and reverberation issues, directivity errors or not. I see hundreds up to thousands of speakers measured in rooms every year, you are wrong. 3. This is really funny because I am exactly one of those people and have miles more expertise when it comes to practical acoustics than both mentioned. Not to discredit them but last I checked none of them treat rooms for a living ;) I am exactly that, I am a practicing doctor / surgeon, I fix rooms with all sorts of tools, I produce music on a professional level. I have worked in the studio world for over a decade. Thank you
@spamcan9208
@spamcan9208 Жыл бұрын
Where's that chair from?
@labalo5
@labalo5 Жыл бұрын
Hurry up! Ron at NRD is going to win with an actual clinic of room treatments!!
@lupoal4113
@lupoal4113 Жыл бұрын
ok, great video but... how deos this fit wih this channel? is this still "the HEADPHONE Show" or "headphone" just change the meaning?
@kyron42
@kyron42 Жыл бұрын
Many people refuse to use EQ. So they're not going to get the best out of their system just like they don't get the best out of their headphones.
@davidruppelt
@davidruppelt Жыл бұрын
Refusing to use EQ seems very backwards to me, but the other end of the spectrum are people who try to correct things with EQ that just can't be corrected without causing more damage than good. Headphones are comparatively easy, but as soon as the room is involved you really have to know what you are doing. For example I initially tried to eq my speaker to a flat target curve, which is a bad idea, because the speakers are supposed to measure flat in an anechoic chamber, but have a downward slope in the highs in a treated room. If you EQ to a flat FR without agressive windowing, you get too much highs. Also, you have to balance correcting the total power FR vs the windowed on axis response, as both matter and can't be corrected with EQ seperatly. Here room treatment and/or speakers with better constant directivity are needed.
@lummond
@lummond Жыл бұрын
Especially hilarious in the context of digital audio. Adding EQ destroys Auto purity, but converting digital to analog? Meh
@genkifd
@genkifd Жыл бұрын
i like bitperfect and ive tired eq but for my system eq put a vail to my system.
@kyron42
@kyron42 Жыл бұрын
@@genkifd you must have an incredibly good system and incredibly good ears. How do you find recordings which were recorded using bit perfect. My favourite recordings used DSP in the production.
@genkifd
@genkifd Жыл бұрын
@@kyron42 bit perfect doesnt mean recorded in bit perfect- bit perfrect means the recording hasnt been tappered with (this includes no DSP).
@yettamon956
@yettamon956 7 ай бұрын
This is how sound dead look like. Too much absorbtion in the room rip high frequency out of equation. It very fatique sitting in the room for an hour.
@JuanJose-wt5yj
@JuanJose-wt5yj Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I see that the room has a lot of acoustic treatment. Can you comment on how many panels there are, what model they are and what is the total investment? Written with translator Greetings
@dyckstefan
@dyckstefan Жыл бұрын
I always wonder what young speaker enthusiasts do for a living... very mysterious seeing people below 40 spending above 100k
@LarsStraathof
@LarsStraathof Жыл бұрын
Work in IT 🤓
@eskamobob8662
@eskamobob8662 Жыл бұрын
I don't have speakers cause an he1 for both home and work would be cheaper than a dedicated listening room 😅
@JC-oz6xn
@JC-oz6xn Жыл бұрын
They're KZbinrs!
@jfandr147
@jfandr147 Ай бұрын
We make our coffee at home
@dyckstefan
@dyckstefan Ай бұрын
@@jfandr147 :O that’s true, timeless solution to being poor ;)
@isnerdy
@isnerdy Жыл бұрын
As far as speaker placement goes, I've tried a number of different recommendations over the years, and so far the absolute best I've found has been from the German high-end speaker manufacturer, Audio Physic, as published in Stereophile's 1995 review of their Virgo loudspeaker. Their recommendation is really pretty different from the recommendation in this video, and I find it really improves both imaging and bass response. With regard to subwoofers, I've never heard a proper high-end setup that sounded right with them. The additional crossovers tend to introduce time delay, and subwoofers often sound muddy and slow anyway. If you have a time-aligned set of speakers, adding a subwoofer can negate a lot of the benefit of that design.
@patrickmiller4987
@patrickmiller4987 Жыл бұрын
There are MANY high end systems that have subwoofers and sound amazing! Just because you havent heard any doesnt mean they dont exist! DSP, REW, Umik-1, DiracLIve, ARC, MSO(multi sub optimizer) etc. etc. have taken 2.1 stereo and home theater to another level in the last few years! Time to catch up!
@TheCloudsMySofa
@TheCloudsMySofa Жыл бұрын
when the math is mathing and immediately pays off.
@jbaranowski1990
@jbaranowski1990 Жыл бұрын
Impressive! But it looks like a rocket science not mention costs and knowledge you need to have to get good results...
@davidruppelt
@davidruppelt Жыл бұрын
It's fairly easy to get a substantial improvement over an untreated room but really difficult to get close to perfection. For someone with the money for the speakers in this video, I would probably recommend to just hire someone to to this.
@djhmax09
@djhmax09 Жыл бұрын
Most of this stuff has already been figured out because of the data that has been collected through various rooms. The problem is the misinformation and the nonsense people and companies like to spread, some of which are commonly present in this video
@kael13
@kael13 Жыл бұрын
All I need now is a giant room that's big enough that my partner will let me plonk speakers a third of the way into.. Anyway, great video with a lot of useful info, but you really have that KZbinr style of hard attack about your speech. You don't need to emphasise every other word! e.g. 4:37 "Now Quite a lot of you May not have too much flexibility with Where you can actually place your Speakers."
@XeonX__ASMR__METAL-experiments
@XeonX__ASMR__METAL-experiments Жыл бұрын
I want to be your friend 😂
@AT-vj2mz
@AT-vj2mz 7 ай бұрын
Has anyone compared listening to open headphones in a treated vs untreated room?
@BumpNrun69
@BumpNrun69 7 ай бұрын
Why would that matter? With headphones, music comes through the headphone only. Acoustic treatments only help music that is played in the room's ambient.
@AT-vj2mz
@AT-vj2mz 7 ай бұрын
@@BumpNrun69 Because you can hear the reflections from open back headphones, O B V I O U S L Y
@FFosaG
@FFosaG 7 ай бұрын
How to be rewarded with the 'audiophile'-badge for your listening room: Step 1: Buy a vitra chair!
@asx1248
@asx1248 Жыл бұрын
Hi, wrt modelling the room with amroc and/or measuring distance from boundaries, what should you do with features in the room that stop it being rectangular, in my case a chimney breast and (behind the speakers) a bay window? Should I ignore the chimney breast but include the bay window in the room length? Thanks
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