I really appreciate the effort put forward for these videos, however I am on a very tight budget and need to prioritize my incremental improvements. I appreciate your identifying the phases. Keep up the good work.
Hello and thank you for your great videos.I have three questions that i hope in next videos you do favor and will answer them ! : 1.Can i cover my diy quadratic diffusers with fabric?! 2.Can we make diffusers for vocal and is that necessary or effective to quality of sound specially for vocal recording?! 3.For get most of our diffusers how much distance should we have from them?! thank you very mach...😘🙏
Is it possible to get a free room analysis even living abroad? I mean, I won't be able to buy your products but if I had a chance to know what is needed, it would be greatly appreciated.
Can you explain why low freq absorption can't absorb mid-high freqs? Doesn't the depth of the absorption make it absorb lower, but it absorbs the shorter wavelengths as a part of that anyway? Or is this NOT a porous absorber?? I've found your videos very helpful btw. Many thanks!
Study the difference between the energy forms of waves and rays. Waves are pressure based energy that oscillates throughout the room. Think ocean waves. Rays are straight line energy that is reflected from surface areas. Think sunlight.
20khz have two great episodes in the loudness wars in the music industry if you are keen. They release 320kps podcasts so you can test out your products too.
You will first need to identify the frequency and amplitude of your floor to ceiling distance. If the frequency and amplitude of your room height matches the rate and level of absorption in the technology.
Hey Dennis! Great video as always :) I'm in the last phase of signing a contract to hire a building that I'm going to build a recording studio in. I was wondering, do you guys at Acoustic Fields also treat rooms to give them a specific character? You mostly focus on getting a flat room response and minimal artifacts, but I want to build a live room that will have a lively (reverberating) sound with a dry character and not too much low end buildup. I might even go as far as making the ceiling adjustable in height to change the reverb time. Are you guys in this business as well? Thanks for all the great information!
Every room size and volume along with the intended usage is different. There is no one size fits all usages. If your looking for easy generalities when it comes to room treatment, you will not find them on this channel.
@@AcousticFields I think anyone that listens to your videos understands all the variables involved. They also know that they can submit their room size for analysis. It seems reasonable that you could draw a use case from one of those submissions to address where to place treatment (TAP) as an example.
I dislike going to the movie theaters now as all of the ones I've been in sound like crap. Very unfortunate, I'd rather watch movies using my nice headphone system. Anyway, thanks for the video!
@@AcousticFields Yes, I live near LA. The only commercial theater I've been to that had tolerable sound was Arclight. Still didn't even sound good then but it wasn't as bad as others.
I really appreciate the effort put forward for these videos, however I am on a very tight budget and need to prioritize my incremental improvements. I appreciate your identifying the phases. Keep up the good work.
Low-frequency management first.
Beauty of a video! Thanks for keeping this kind of content coming! Love it!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Hello and thank you for your great videos.I have three questions that i hope in next videos you do favor and will answer them ! : 1.Can i cover my diy quadratic diffusers with fabric?! 2.Can we make diffusers for vocal and is that necessary or effective to quality of sound specially for vocal recording?! 3.For get most of our diffusers how much distance should we have from them?! thank you very mach...😘🙏
Do not cover diffusers with fabric. It disrupts the distribution array of the diffuser.
Where to put it?
Everywhere, and possibly some stuff in front of that!
Yes, just remember to TAP this and TAP that and you are good to go.
We have walls in our multiple channel room that have two layers of 12" deep Carbon Panels. We then have diffusers in front of that 24".
Is it possible to get a free room analysis even living abroad? I mean, I won't be able to buy your products but if I had a chance to know what is needed, it would be greatly appreciated.
Our free services take a lot of work. Our goal is to assist people with their acoustical issues and prescribe our tecnologies to treat.
Can you explain why low freq absorption can't absorb mid-high freqs? Doesn't the depth of the absorption make it absorb lower, but it absorbs the shorter wavelengths as a part of that anyway? Or is this NOT a porous absorber?? I've found your videos very helpful btw. Many thanks!
Study the difference between the energy forms of waves and rays. Waves are pressure based energy that oscillates throughout the room. Think ocean waves. Rays are straight line energy that is reflected from surface areas. Think sunlight.
Thanks for the video! Do you do professional consulting for existing studios? :)
Yes, fill out the information in this link: www.acousticfields.com/free-room-analysis/
20khz have two great episodes in the loudness wars in the music industry if you are keen. They release 320kps podcasts so you can test out your products too.
Quantity versus quality. Its an age old argument that makes no sense to us. You should be able to have both. We do in all of our rooms.
What about membrane absorbers on the ceiling?
You will first need to identify the frequency and amplitude of your floor to ceiling distance. If the frequency and amplitude of your room height matches the rate and level of absorption in the technology.
Hi Engineer ... I emailed you for an acoustic problem ... there was no news about you
What is your issue? Please be specific.
Hey Dennis! Great video as always :)
I'm in the last phase of signing a contract to hire a building that I'm going to build a recording studio in. I was wondering, do you guys at Acoustic Fields also treat rooms to give them a specific character? You mostly focus on getting a flat room response and minimal artifacts, but I want to build a live room that will have a lively (reverberating) sound with a dry character and not too much low end buildup. I might even go as far as making the ceiling adjustable in height to change the reverb time. Are you guys in this business as well? Thanks for all the great information!
We design all of our rooms for a desired usage pressure range and Rt- 30/60 times. Send us your contact info. to: info@acousticfields.com.
I wish they would answer more of the questions rather than creating more questions.
Every room size and volume along with the intended usage is different. There is no one size fits all usages. If your looking for easy generalities when it comes to room treatment, you will not find them on this channel.
@@AcousticFields I think anyone that listens to your videos understands all the variables involved. They also know that they can submit their room size for analysis. It seems reasonable that you could draw a use case from one of those submissions to address where to place treatment (TAP) as an example.
I dislike going to the movie theaters now as all of the ones I've been in sound like crap.
Very unfortunate, I'd rather watch movies using my nice headphone system.
Anyway, thanks for the video!
Even the movie theaters in Los Angeles sound horrible. Pressure levels that approach 120 dB SPL and no speech intelligibility.
@@AcousticFields Yes, I live near LA. The only commercial theater I've been to that had tolerable sound was Arclight. Still didn't even sound good then but it wasn't as bad as others.
TOTAL FAN
Thank you for your support and following.
💪
Thanks.