Money Down the Drain

Basic Audio Advice — These Are the Fundamentals of Good Sound

Readers of this blog know that I’m a fan of big speakers, but in a room that’s as bad for sound reproduction as this one is, these monsters would qualify as a form of torture at anything above a whisper.

There is an ideal balance between absorption and reflection that must be found for every room. The balance this fellow has chosen is 98% reflection, which will lead to 100% awful sound.

I don’t even like the picture between the speakers. If you must have something there, in my experience rarely will it sound good unless it is five or more feet off the ground. (See picture below.)

Note that sidewall absorption in our listening room is never more than about five feet high. For some reason that seems to work the best. We tried lots of different heights over the course of years and we always came back to nothing over five feet.

The back wall has 4 inch thick 4×8 sheets of styrofoam across most of it, leaving the corners empty (which always seems to work the best, again, who knows why).

A small piece of absoptive material in the middle up high seemed to help, but more than that was too much and less did nothing.

These may be the most wonderful speakers in the world in the right room, but in this room there is no speaker that could possibly reproduce music properly, which means this guy spent a lot of money and got nothing for it. He’s not alone.

He could get some carpet and pull his speakers well out into the room for starters, but then the whole thing just won’t have the elegance it did, so what on earth would ever make him do such a thing? His favorite music? Hah, that’s a good one.


Further Reading

2 comments

  1. Exactly true. I would rather listen to a modest system in a good room than a $300k one in a meh or bad room. Recently listened to a $350k system at a audio emporium. The worst sound I have heard in a very long time. I told my wife I would rather listen to my little computer speakers with digital audio than to be forced to that all analog monstrosity. Of course my first clue it was going to sound like crap was when they raved and trotted out the latest and greatest Aja audiopile pressing. I did dig around in their records and found a OJC pressing of Bill Evans that at least sounded somewhat like music. No White Hot Stamper would have sounded even decent on this system/setup/room combination.

    1. My experience with “audio salons” ended a long time ago, about the time they started calling themselves “audio salons.”

      I could do listings for expensive crap stereos by the score, but the people that buy these systems don’t read this blog, so what good would it do?

      Thanks for writing,
      Best, TP

Leave a Reply