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If you are considering the addition of a home theater,
you need to pay close attention to the room's acoustics.
A room with the proper acoustical treatments and only
average gear will easily outperform a room with great
gear and poor acoustics. Typically the weakest link
in your system's playback chain will be your acoustical
environment. This is because when you are more than
a few feet away from the source, the majority of sound
comes to you indirectly from the room and not directly
from the speakers.
Because speakers spread sound in many directions,
the room and its contents filter your systems audio
output, exaggerating some frequencies and softening
others. The goal of a home theater is to re-create the
same sound that that was heard in the studio when the
soundtrack was recorded. The problem is that every room
and their surroundings and contents have different characteristics
that will affect the performance of your speakers.
The first issue you should address is sound transmission,
in other words external noise leaking into the room
or visa versa. One of the greatest misconceptions in
sound control is that absorptive materials such as acoustic
ceiling tiles will block sound waves. While absorptive
treatments such as fiberglass
panels greatly enhance the quality of sound by controlling
such unwanted effects as reverberation, they do not
act as a sound barrier. In order to stop the transmission
of sound you need to add mass and air space. There are
many in-wall acoustical materials and techniques to
control sound transmission and can be as simple as using
multiple layers of drywall, adding mass
loaded vinyl, or decoupling walls, floors, and ceilings
with isolation
clips and resilient channel. When it is not practical
to decouple the floor, you can use
isolation risers to decouple the loudspeakers from
the floors. Another place sound will escape is through
doors and framing. Although acoustically
rated doors are not inexpensive by any means, if
your surrounding environment is noisy and it is within
your budget, they are well worth the investment.
Another issue can be intrusive noises from HVAC and
plumbing. The steady noise of air blowing through ductwork,
or the occasional whooshing of water through plumbing
can be enough to distract from the subtleties of the
soundtrack, making it difficult to discern dialog. These
noises can be controlled by simply applying pipe
and duct lagging materials.
Once you've dealt with the sounds you don't want, you
need to enhance or "tune" the room's acoustics
utilizing absorptive panels and/or diffusor arrays.
Low frequency waves are the strongest and hardest to
control, so the best place to start is with bass trapping.
To identify where bass trapping is needed, you need
to identify room modes based on the relationship between
length, width, and height using a room
mode calculator. You can also simply play a music
sample that is familiar, and walk around the room listening
for a buildup of base. This will often occur in corners
which are a good location for adding bass
traps. To deal with the higher frequencies, as a
rule of thumb, a well treated home theater will have
approximately 40 to 50 percent of the wall and ceiling
surfaces treated with
absorption, and the remainder with diffusion
or reflection. The most widely used treatment technique
is to absorb reflections along the front and side walls,
and diffuse reflections toward the rear of the room.
The objective is to create a well balanced room that
is not too"boomy" on the low end, and not
too "dry" on the high end.
While it is always best to seek professional
consultation to address acoustical problems at the
beginning of construction, there are always ways to
improve an existing room's acoustics. Remember that
everything in the room has acoustical properties, and
in many cases can be used to your advantage. For instance,
lining up a bookcase with the spines of the books staggered
will offer some degree of lateral diffusion, and a carpeted
floor is more desirable than hardwood, since bare surfaces
in a room will reflect sound waves, distorting sounds
and causing fuzzy dialog. The bottom line is that regardless
of your budget, there are always ways to enhance the
performance of your home theater system, resulting in
a more pleasurable and realistic sensory experience.
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