I've got a hold of an old house here with a peculiar design.
Made a very crude Sketchup design.
Basically, it's a living room about 3.5m x 3.5m, with openings to the rooms each sides.
It also has a corridor at the end of the living room, connecting to the rooms on each side and the living room.. The corridor is about 70cm wide.
I was thinking of setting up the speakers (likely transmission lines) in front of the openings of the corridor, and using the space in the corridor between the speakers as bass traps.
Any tips about what could be achieved here?
I think it could be fun, but I'm not sure how to approach this. Never been in a situation like this before.
Made a very crude Sketchup design.
Basically, it's a living room about 3.5m x 3.5m, with openings to the rooms each sides.
It also has a corridor at the end of the living room, connecting to the rooms on each side and the living room.. The corridor is about 70cm wide.
I was thinking of setting up the speakers (likely transmission lines) in front of the openings of the corridor, and using the space in the corridor between the speakers as bass traps.
Any tips about what could be achieved here?
I think it could be fun, but I'm not sure how to approach this. Never been in a situation like this before.
Interesting opportunity. I'm not sure it would have as much effect as some small distributed subs for dealing with modes, but I could be wrong. It could also be used for bass horns.
Wow, that's quite an interesting room to work with. Is the door-frame-looking box to the right of the "person" a doorway?
From what I see, I'd try a couple of things. I think the "control in the front, chaos in the back" theory might be worth a try - so have the doorways behind you instead. Or try the room to the left. It will have more predictable results.
For me, a few afternoons with some audio gear and some focused time listening would help to understand more about how the room might respond. Do you have any way to test with frequency sweeps or ?
Good luck. I'm interested to know how this project is going!
From what I see, I'd try a couple of things. I think the "control in the front, chaos in the back" theory might be worth a try - so have the doorways behind you instead. Or try the room to the left. It will have more predictable results.
For me, a few afternoons with some audio gear and some focused time listening would help to understand more about how the room might respond. Do you have any way to test with frequency sweeps or ?
Good luck. I'm interested to know how this project is going!