You may need a bigger room too! Those bad boys are at least 8' tall! You are also siting nearfield, right on top of them - you'd get a better soundstage if you sit a few feet back? At least 8' back IMO
@dkoonoo You're right, there is still some reverb in the room. What we aim for in listening and performance environments is to retain a certain "ring". The ring (or remaining reverb) is essential in any listening environment to maintain beauty. A room with too much absorption will sound dead, which often times reduces sound quality to less than it was before treatment.
@dkoonoo Just to add to what asolutions1 said there, 2 channel listening rooms, like this, are always going to want to be a little more "live" than a home theater set up which typically has a 5.1 or 7.1 system. 5.1 systems will need a little ring to the room but not very much, where as a 7.1 system its almost advisable to just dead out the room completely and let the computer in the audio system "tell" you what the reverb time is, or the directionality of the sound.
WoW a Brotha with a High End Big Rig !!! I thought I was the only 1 !!! LOL
Sirflatch 1 week ago
"Ear-bleeding levels" indeed!
jedirambo 3 months ago
You may need a bigger room too! Those bad boys are at least 8' tall! You are also siting nearfield, right on top of them - you'd get a better soundstage if you sit a few feet back? At least 8' back IMO
jedirambo 3 months ago
Aren't those Soundlabs?
shstrang98 3 months ago
Here's an acoustic solution: Get some headphones.
abitpotty 3 months ago
I like bigger speakers !!^^
krakpatsboem 4 months ago
To litle....^^
krakpatsboem 4 months ago
"I've been a Audiophile..."
Lost it's credibility right at this sentence...
mr4y 6 months ago
@mr4y He said "an". It's cool.
casestudyification 4 months ago
@mr4y How?
shstrang98 3 months ago
Sounds like you still have too much reverb in that room, is this as far as you were willing to go in terms of treatment....a compromise?
dkoonoo 8 months ago
@dkoonoo You're right, there is still some reverb in the room. What we aim for in listening and performance environments is to retain a certain "ring". The ring (or remaining reverb) is essential in any listening environment to maintain beauty. A room with too much absorption will sound dead, which often times reduces sound quality to less than it was before treatment.
asolutions1 8 months ago
@dkoonoo Just to add to what asolutions1 said there, 2 channel listening rooms, like this, are always going to want to be a little more "live" than a home theater set up which typically has a 5.1 or 7.1 system. 5.1 systems will need a little ring to the room but not very much, where as a 7.1 system its almost advisable to just dead out the room completely and let the computer in the audio system "tell" you what the reverb time is, or the directionality of the sound.
mboughan1 8 months ago
para de falar e coloca esse monstro para tocar...
abainfo 2 months ago
@abainfo stop talking and put this monster to play ...
Sirflatch 1 week ago