I stumbled across an interesting article over at Sound on Sound written by studio design consultant Carl Tatz. I'm not sure if the article is free to read, but the article can be found here in any case:
The Elephant In The Control Room | Sound On Sound
To summarize the article, the theory and his experience is that to be able to tame those hills and mountains measured in the lows of a room, the solution isn't about adding even more bass traps. Instead one should look into using a sub to even out the frequency response.
I was just looking about to add (yes even more) bass traps (was looking at the GIK acoustics Soffit Bass Traps
http://http://gikacoustics.co.uk/pro...fit-bass-trap/) when I read the article. Now I'm not sure whether to purchase Neumann KH805 to complement my 310's, or more treatment.
I've pasted a few quotes from the article down below so that you can get a grasp of what it's about
:
"The common advice given to solve this problem is to add acoustic treatment into the room. Bass traps in particular seem to promise the most ‘magic’. Acoustic treatment is critical in control–room design, and is most valuable for attenuating side wall and ceiling first reflections, and to remove any sort of spurious reverberant ambiance. Any sonic information coming back to the listener at the listening position, other than the direct sound from the nearfields, will cancel with the direct sound to produce comb-filtering, making the playback sound ‘far away’ as well as being inaccurate. Rear–wall absorption and corner bass trapping is generally a good idea and, combined with first–reflection treatments, will render a smoothing effect for the control room’s acoustic character. I would offer a word of caution, however, about bass trapping at the front of the room that directly affects the low frequencies at the listening position: without careful evaluation, these nearfield traps can just as easily be destructive as helpful, causing unwanted frequency dips."
"The observed phenomenon is as follows (cue for the acoustic animal trainer to lead the elephant into the control room). In a personal home–studio–sized control room, nearfield or mid–field monitors are usually mounted on speaker stands behind a desk or atop the meterbridge of a large–format console at tweeter/listener ear height, which is typically 48–50 inches (122–127 cm) above the floor. The overwhelming majority of the time, this configuration leads to a low–frequency acoustic cancellation due to the interaction of the floor, front wall, ceiling, console and listening position, creating a dip in the neighbourhood of 125Hz, give or take 25Hz."
"So how do you tackle this problem? No amount of bass trapping or other acoustic treatment is ever going to satisfactorily attenuate a wide 15dB dip, and if you tried to EQ it away, you wouldn’t be able to turn your monitors up past 45dB without blowing the woofers... So what’s the answer? Subwoofers
Yes, subwoofers. Properly positioned — and two are always better than one for phase–correcting axial modes — they will begin to fill in your Grand Canyon of missing bass information. This is the only way the canyon can be filled, and no room is too small for this to work."
Anyone here care to chime in with their experience regarding this subject? Curious to know
Btw. I'm not having issues with the canyons he's speaking of here, but I'm always looking to tune my room (ok, my speakers) to even more perfection.