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#1
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My combo listening room/living room is 11' x 19' with 3 exits. 1 on the right
leading to the bedroom and 2 on the left, one going to the kitchen and the other to the front door. Actaully it's one exit that goes to the front door, then the kitchen then back to the living room. Question is: is this considered a large room or not? My system has never been strained by it (Adcom GFA 555 amp, 555 preamp and Infinity Kappy 8 speakers. Best, Mark Allen Zimmerman * Chicago |
#2
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A mid-sized room by American standards. Especially if the ceilings are
8' or lower. The openings do increase the volume and should be closed for greatest bass response. If you get too much bass, then you can adjust by opening one or more. A nice feature at a nice price. - Bill www.uptownaudio.com Roanoke VA (540) 343-1250 "MarkZimmerman" wrote in message news:vVd2b.185694$cF.62226@rwcrnsc53... My combo listening room/living room is 11' x 19' with 3 exits. 1 on the right leading to the bedroom and 2 on the left, one going to the kitchen and the other to the front door. Actaully it's one exit that goes to the front door, then the kitchen then back to the living room. Question is: is this considered a large room or not? My system has never been strained by it (Adcom GFA 555 amp, 555 preamp and Infinity Kappy 8 speakers. Best, Mark Allen Zimmerman * Chicago |
#3
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#4
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Uptown Audio wrote:
A mid-sized room by American standards. Especially if the ceilings are 8' or lower. The openings do increase the volume and should be closed for greatest bass response. If you get too much bass, then you can adjust by opening one or more. A nice feature at a nice price. - Bill www.uptownaudio.com Roanoke VA (540) 343-1250 ====================================== Bill, First of all, I thoroughly enjoy and respect your advice. You are always able to stay on topic and I believe your knowledgeable responses are helpful to the original questioner. I am curious about what you mean above when you say "The openings ... should be closed". Are you proposing that Mark close the "openings" to his kitchen, bedroom, or front door so that his audio system has better bass response? I interpret at least one or two of the openings to be an opening such as a hall or cased opening, rather than a door. Am I misunderstanding something? Jerry Cipriano |
#6
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I don't know whether he has the ability to close doors there or if the
openings are fixed as he did not specify. I guessed that one or two may have been doorways, but who knows. It is really esoteric if the room has all corners intact and is not terribly open to a much larger space. If you can close-off a room acoustically, really seal it rather well as with solid doors that fit into a trim, then you can increase the levels there somewhat. If you have openings you lose sound pressure and therefore bass response as you then increase the volume of the space without increasing the output capability of the system. I think that is why he was asking if his room was too small or too big (optimum perhaps?) as his system seems appropriate for it now. Maybe he is thinking of relocating it and is trying to decide where. Your guess is as good as mine. I meant to provide a direct answer to whether the room might be considered "large". The bass response was just an added thought about how he might use the room to his advantage regardless of it's size or the sound of the system presently. If you were to imagine a room with "walls" consisting of all doors and posts, then you can more readily imagine how opening and closing various doors would affect the dynamics, reflections and response of the system within that space. - Bill www.uptownaudio.com Roanoke VA (540) 343-1250 "Jerry C." wrote in message news:rO47b.289242$cF.89215@rwcrnsc53... Uptown Audio wrote: A mid-sized room by American standards. Especially if the ceilings are 8' or lower. The openings do increase the volume and should be closed for greatest bass response. If you get too much bass, then you can adjust by opening one or more. A nice feature at a nice price. - Bill www.uptownaudio.com Roanoke VA (540) 343-1250 ====================================== Bill, First of all, I thoroughly enjoy and respect your advice. You are always able to stay on topic and I believe your knowledgeable responses are helpful to the original questioner. I am curious about what you mean above when you say "The openings ... should be closed". Are you proposing that Mark close the "openings" to his kitchen, bedroom, or front door so that his audio system has better bass response? I interpret at least one or two of the openings to be an opening such as a hall or cased opening, rather than a door. Am I misunderstanding something? Jerry Cipriano |
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