User211
Well-known member
I spent sometime today looking through old Apogee forum archives concerning rear wall treatment. I came across the following quote which I thought interesting:
"I have had dipoles since 1976 and nothing but. I have tried every permutation of deadening the rear wall and have always wound up back to a fully reflective wall.
In deadening the rear wall you cut the systems output and dynamics drop. For a while I might think the imaging was more accurate but you loose the air and sence of depth same as pushing the speakers to close to the rear wall. In most cases I have found that as long as the floor is really dead, heavy padding and carpet everything else takes care of itself."
I've now seen elaborate diffusers constructed at considerable expense - only to be rejected by the man who went to the trouble of doing so. Not his "cup of tea". The preference seems to be to use diffusers as opposed to absorbers.
I have to admit I am not encouraged by what I have read overall. Though I have read both positive and negative views on the matter.
With regards to the GIK bass panel, I feel this is simply not a great idea. If you want to kill the back wave, you really want to kill or diffuse it it all and not just part of it - otherwise I feel you really are going to end up with strange results. Looking at the in-room FRs I've taken, I'm pretty sure I don't wan't to go absorbing bass output anyway - it simply isn't excessive.
Another point made is that you may have a 20DB peak to peak variance in your room and acoustic panels may make a 2DB difference to that at best. Mine's is about 12DB but that is absolute worst case. The vast majority is within about 8DB. That's a pretty damn fine in-room response, IMHO.
"I have had dipoles since 1976 and nothing but. I have tried every permutation of deadening the rear wall and have always wound up back to a fully reflective wall.
In deadening the rear wall you cut the systems output and dynamics drop. For a while I might think the imaging was more accurate but you loose the air and sence of depth same as pushing the speakers to close to the rear wall. In most cases I have found that as long as the floor is really dead, heavy padding and carpet everything else takes care of itself."
I've now seen elaborate diffusers constructed at considerable expense - only to be rejected by the man who went to the trouble of doing so. Not his "cup of tea". The preference seems to be to use diffusers as opposed to absorbers.
I have to admit I am not encouraged by what I have read overall. Though I have read both positive and negative views on the matter.
With regards to the GIK bass panel, I feel this is simply not a great idea. If you want to kill the back wave, you really want to kill or diffuse it it all and not just part of it - otherwise I feel you really are going to end up with strange results. Looking at the in-room FRs I've taken, I'm pretty sure I don't wan't to go absorbing bass output anyway - it simply isn't excessive.
Another point made is that you may have a 20DB peak to peak variance in your room and acoustic panels may make a 2DB difference to that at best. Mine's is about 12DB but that is absolute worst case. The vast majority is within about 8DB. That's a pretty damn fine in-room response, IMHO.