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Post by deepak on Jul 25, 2023 9:29:14 GMT
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Post by deepak on Jul 25, 2023 9:30:52 GMT
Hello, and thankyou allowing me to your forum.
I have a space im turning into a mixing /writing room. I plan to have alternate absorption and scattering pannels on the side walls for starters, and the floor will be tiled with a rug taking up about 70% of the floor area of room 1. As you can see from my splendid drawing i have a gap about 1.6 meters in the dividing wall. Ive been playing with the idea of keeping it open? From a room acustics perspective does anybody have any thoughts on keeping it open? I was wondering if i was to deflect sound into room 2 with panels, which will also over time be decked out with a mix of apsortion and diffusion would this be a viable option? Or is it going to play up with my listening position?
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Post by Hexspa on Jul 25, 2023 15:31:09 GMT
Keeping it open is probably better. The best thing would be to knock down that dividing wall and use the whole space. This would give you lower fundamental modes and lessen the strength of reflections. Sylvia Massey does a similar one-room approach.
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Post by deepak on Jul 26, 2023 10:32:21 GMT
Yeah i agree hex, it would leave a collum just off central to the room but think for now im going to play with it semi open as it is, it might lend itself to some intresting results, im making everthing removable, not rushing things this time around. Where would you suggest mic placement for a base reading of the room/s?
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Post by Hexspa on Jul 26, 2023 16:02:24 GMT
Generally 20, 32, and 45% any given dimension is the mathematical best location for even bass so I'd start there.
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