Quote:
Originally Posted by Wes Lachot Seamus,
That fixed-frequency null will be present anywhere along the axis between the speaker and the listening position. That's what makes front wall nulls different from rear wall nulls, which change frequency as you move around the room. Front wall nulls, on the other hand, stay fixed in frequency as long as the listener is positioned so that the speaker is between the listener and the front wall.
--Wes |
Crazy.
So, after I build the wall to change my length to 20.425, I would probably want to position the speakers in a place that makes that null higher in the frequency spectrum so that I could hit it with broadband absoption. Otherwise, if it's too low, I'd have to build some tuned traps...
does that even make sense...?
Thanks,
Seamus