Rerurn to Romy the Cat's Site
In the Forum: Audio Discussions
In the Thread: Big room vs small room
Post Subject: Symphony Hall acoustics for home listeningPosted by skushino on: 7/14/2012
fiogf49gjkf0d
Last week in a different thread I posted:
"I've been reading about
the acoustic characteristics of the world's great symphony halls, like
Boston and the Concertgebouw. Did you know that Sabine, Berenak, and
Cyril Harris mathematically defined those characteristics, using metrics
like RT-60, clarity, intimacy, warmth, spaciousness, and background
noise? The reverb time for the great halls is around 2 sec for
symphonic music, around 1.5 sec for opera (due to voice clarity). For
smaller rooms used as monitoring studios (~ 3000 - 15,000 ft^3), the
suggested reverb time is around .35 - .9 sec.
The audio
community standard wisdom for treating listening rooms seems to be as
much bass trapping as possible. This seems completely opposite of
efforts to prolong reverb time. Given a desire to extend bass reverb
time, wouldn't it be better to minimize bass treatment, while treating
some reflecting surfaces for MF and HF absorption? In other words, even
if it is physically impossible to recreate symphony hall acoustics at
home, if one wants to at least suggest longer reverb at LF, compared
with MF and HF, bass trapping seems to be the wrong direction.
From
the pictures of your listening room, and your past experiments with
RT60, is this consistent with your experience? bty, I posted in this
thread because it seems like a room with some effort at recreating
symphony hall acoustics would also be a wonderful venue for live chamber
music."
I'm not a headphone guy, and this is the first time I heard about hardware or software to replicate the acoustics of the great symphony halls. Question - do you have direct personal experience with these devices? What are the downsides, if any? Can you point me to a specific device / product / software? The power to define acoustic space, being able to dial in the acoustics of a small intimate lounge for jazz, or a large reverberant church for choir, or a treated hall for orchestra, is very appealing.
I'm interested in having this kind of control for my home listening, although it seems to defy the laws of physics.
Rerurn to Romy the Cat's Site