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#1
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I have a whisper room that is 8.5 X 12 X 7 for recording
I have a problem with low frequency standing waves. Does anybody have an idea in how to minimize this problem kevin |
#2
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Matrixmusic wrote:
I have a whisper room that is 8.5 X 12 X 7 for recording I have a problem with low frequency standing waves. Does anybody have an idea in how to minimize this problem There's a nice discussion of this in the FAQ. In a place that small it may be hard to trap it, but your first problem is to figure out what frequencies the problems are centered around and how wide they are. If you've basically got one big mode problem, a trap may be the way to go. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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Matrixmusic wrote:
I have a whisper room that is 8.5 X 12 X 7 for recording I have a problem with low frequency standing waves. Does anybody have an idea in how to minimize this problem kevin Bass traps. They really work. |
#4
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![]() In article .com writes: I have a problem with low frequency standing waves. Traps. See http://www.realtraps.com or http://www.ethanwiner.com for some good information on how to figure out what your problem really is and some approaches to solve it. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
#5
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Matrixmusic wrote:
I have a whisper room that is 8.5 X 12 X 7 for recording I have a problem with low frequency standing waves. Does anybody have an idea in how to minimize this problem First of all, you need to quantify the problem. If you download a copy of my Control Room spreadsheet, once you have entered your room ratios and room width (in your case H:W:L = 1:1.14:1.71), it will calculate amongst other things, the modal frequencies of your room. (Please read the instructions on the download page carefully!) http://www.rmmpnet.org/members/ChrisW/index.html Once you know the model frequencies, you will be able to see where the modes tend to bunch up, and this will give you a good idea of what your problem frequency ranges are. A first glance at the modal frequencies for your room shows that you will have 3 modes bunched up between 132.5 Hz and 133.8 Hz, 3 modes between 151.0 Hz and 152.5 Hz, and 5 modes between 200.9 Hz and 203.6 Hz. Then take a look at Auralex's website. http://www.auralex.com They make a range of bass trap products called LENRD's (Low End Noise Reduction Device) which will help your situation greatly. Chris W -- The voice of ignorance speaks loud and long, But the words of the wise are quiet and few. --- |
#6
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Kevin,
I have a whisper room that is 8.5 X 12 X 7 for recording I have a problem with low frequency standing waves. What are you recording in there? As others already told you, bass traps are clearly the answer, but what type and how many you need depends on the frequencies being played in the room. Also, a room like that needs broadband absorption more than just bass trapping. Mike suggested my web sites (thanks Mike!), and you'll find a lot of detailed information there. --Ethan |
#7
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I would not say bass traps only...
Another problem may be parallel walls... Try putting "absorbing panels" on the ceiling and on the rear wall and if it is not enough two small on the side walls, maybe not one in front of the other... Cheers! "Matrixmusic" ha scritto nel messaggio oups.com... I have a whisper room that is 8.5 X 12 X 7 for recording I have a problem with low frequency standing waves. Does anybody have an idea in how to minimize this problem kevin |
#8
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Federico wrote:
I would not say bass traps only... Another problem may be parallel walls... Try putting "absorbing panels" on the ceiling and on the rear wall and if it is not enough two small on the side walls, maybe not one in front of the other... Ethan's RealTraps are easy to angle. But do much of that in a "room" that size, and only miniature recordings are possible. g -- ha |
#9
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he should be able to line the entire edges of all 4 ceilings with
Ethan's bass traps and not suffer undue shrinkage of the performance space. the parallel walls have much more to do with flutter echo than his standing wave problem. I would think using one size of Ethan's traps on a set of parallel walls, and another size on the other set of parallel wall edges would help knock out two areas of bass build up. But check with Ethan. |
#10
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My singer is 6'8" tall, so Ethan's bass traps on the ceiling would create
some shrinkage, but that's a unusual circumstance and only pertinent due to the 7' ceiling. If the size of a particular singer is unknown, say for incoming new clients, then the walls/corners would be the place to look. Short rooms can cause some people problems anyway, and problems usually leak out into performances. Then again, for my purposes I would probably only use a whisper room for vocals. 12 x 8.5' is big enough for drums and then the wall space becomes more at a premium than the ceiling (well, except for overheads). The good thing about Ethan's broadband absorbers is that they can easily be moved to support either configuration. Additionally, WhisperRooms has optional application specific sound absorbtion products. -- Roger W. Norman SirMusic Studio wrote in message ups.com... he should be able to line the entire edges of all 4 ceilings with Ethan's bass traps and not suffer undue shrinkage of the performance space. the parallel walls have much more to do with flutter echo than his standing wave problem. I would think using one size of Ethan's traps on a set of parallel walls, and another size on the other set of parallel wall edges would help knock out two areas of bass build up. But check with Ethan. |
#11
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![]() "Roger W. Norman" wrote in message... Additionally, WhisperRooms has optional application specific sound absorbtion products. I was wondering if "whisper room" was the brand name or simply Kevin's terminology. If the prior, this problem should be addressed by them, and I'm surprised the room didn't have certain acoustic properties designed in and made known. DM |
#12
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I made the assumption based on the fact that he didn't say "isolation room"
of X x Y x Z dimensions. Once I looked at the website, it seemed obvious that he indeed had a WhisperRoom. But I could be wrong. I think it happened once before! g -- Roger W. Norman SirMusic Studio "David Morgan (MAMS)" wrote in message news:Urg3e.30$%b1.19@trnddc08... "Roger W. Norman" wrote in message... Additionally, WhisperRooms has optional application specific sound absorbtion products. I was wondering if "whisper room" was the brand name or simply Kevin's terminology. If the prior, this problem should be addressed by them, and I'm surprised the room didn't have certain acoustic properties designed in and made known. DM |
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