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Post by Ferzeleid on Oct 4, 2017 14:07:37 GMT
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Post by Ferzeleid on Oct 4, 2017 14:09:04 GMT
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Post by Ferzeleid on Oct 4, 2017 14:11:29 GMT
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Post by rock on Oct 4, 2017 21:11:45 GMT
If you've read all the information in the stickies and you're still lost, please try to ask one specific question. But first, search the forum for answers to your questions; there are hundreds of answers here to questions you will probably ask.
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Post by Ferzeleid on Oct 5, 2017 0:49:43 GMT
Thank you rock, I will try, slowly cause english is not my mother tongue. Best wishes.
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Post by rock on Oct 5, 2017 2:26:32 GMT
Sorry Ferzeleid, but english is my only language and as far as I know, it's the only language used on this forum. Maybe you can feed the info you find here through a digital or other translator and possibly make some sense of the fundamentals of what we're talking about here... else, make a request here in your native tongue to other fluent speakers/writers to help you with the basics.
Best of luck to you!
Rock
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Post by Hexspa on Oct 5, 2017 4:11:53 GMT
Hi Ferz, welcome.
Rock is right: it's time to study. Feeling lost is completely natural. It is for that reason I made a step-by-step pdf guide as a companion to a video series which can help you to get started. If you go to my site and click on Tutorials - Listening Room, you can find that resource.
The bottom line is that there are ideals and there's what Ethan would call "manageable".
The first order of business, for you, would be to explore other options for rooms as yours is as near a cube as a trapezoid can be. After that, explore whether your presently identified listening position is giving you the best results. If you are using the best room available and your listening position is the best one possible then it's time to treat your RFZ. Once a basic RFZ is established you can perform measurements to find the most ideal locations for bass absorption. If you remain in your current room then please consider using up to 8" thick rigid on every available surface. If you can't do that then do the best you can. You can probably get a good result in the room, you can at least definitely improve it, but it might not be the cheapest or easiest room to treat.
I haven't done the math but the reason your spectrogram looks like spectral plot for a sine wave is because most of your room's dimensions are reinforcing one frequency. You can guess which one that is. It is for that reason that rooms with identical dimensions (or even multiples, for that matter) are best avoided.
Thanks.
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Post by Ferzeleid on Oct 5, 2017 9:08:37 GMT
Thank you Hexspa for your response, you are right time to study and by the way I will improve my english (two birds in one shot like we say in Spain). Best wishes to you and Rock too.
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