garethmetcalf wrote:Source of the post That’s what I’d been wondering - are the dips around 60, 100 and 150 causing me to accentuate those frequencies? This is why I’m considering the proposal to build tuned absorbers at these frequencies.
These dips certainly seem the most likely culprit to my mind. But if they are caused by SBIR, I don't think a tuned absorber would directly address them.
In fact, I thinking about it there was one track in particular and I bet I have the version 1 mix saved. I should analyse it to see which frequencies are pronounced in case it correlates somehow.
Well worth checking out.
I suppose floor bounce is possible - I do have some more of those GIK absorbers in the loft so maybe I could drop them on the floor and see what happens.
Definitely try this. I have done similar and it does make a difference. Look at the impulse chart to see if it makes a difference to any of the peaks, particularly one at the time corresponding to the additional distance imposed by the floor bounce. Remember to do this for one speaker at a time; impulse charts don't really apply in this case with both speakers engaged.
Going back to the soffits, there is evidence that things change in the low mid, with a couple of dips between 400 and 600, however before soffits there was quite a peak there so one bad thing has been replaced with another. I do think that on balance they’ve had a positive effect, particularly on the waterfall plot.
I think it is the waterfall chart that matters most in this assessment as it shows the resonances through time, and that is what the acousticians you mentioned said a problem could potentially be. This is what a resonating structure would do. The SPL chart is only a snapshot and prone to interference from other factors.
As you are using full range speakers in the soffits there may be limits in how much you can address the floor bounce SBIR. I believe some folks high pass the soffit speakers above the nasty SBIR frequencies and use a sub woofer on the floor to replace them. Since it's on the floor there is no floor bounce.
Cheers,
Jennifer