
peterc52
Well-known member
Def much better! Yeah!
The wood floor is laid upon 1 inch insulation. And then concrete underneath. Reducing bass from coming outside the room.Now put the cab direct to the hardwood and see what happens. If you are on pier and beam the whole floor will become a soundboard and probably give you yet more bass (but possibly induce some extraneous noise into your recording). If you're on concrete slab you might get a bit more treble or it might just remain neutral. Regardless, I always like a rug in front of the amp to reduce some of the sharp, biting acoustic reflections coming off the floor. What's weird is my floors are straight concrete slab, no flooring, but my ceiling is vaulted so I don't have those harsh reflections even without a rug.
It might be worth a try to see what kind of coupling effect you get. The beauty of having a setup like yours is you have the luxury and time to experiment with what works best for your rig and your room. Good luck Peter!!!The wood floor is laid upon 1 inch insulation. And then concrete underneath. Reducing bass from coming outside the room.
In Danish it’s called: floating floor
Thank you!It might be worth a try to see what kind of coupling effect you get. The beauty of having a setup like yours is you have the luxury and time to experiment with what works best for your rig and your room. Good luck Peter!!!
This. It’s why I attached 18 couches in all the corners of my room. If I ever want to sit on one of them I just pull it down.counterintuitively...
Bass can resonate and/or reflect, and cause standing waves that effectively kill itself at points in a room. Nuking bass at walls or corners can increase the bass at listening positions.
Bass traps and whatnot are cool, and nerds love to spend money...but a strategically placed couch can do the same thing.
Phase cancelation is what prevents you from hearing frequencies. Absorbing frequencies prevents them from bouncing back and canceling out. Otherwise more bass just bounces back and cancels all the same.Bass traps absorb low frequency sound...seems the opposite of what Pete wants.
Acoustic panels, blankets on walls, carpet, heavy curtains, should absorb some treble...but will also absorb other frequencies.
+1You need lots of treatment. Send your room specs to someone in sound treatment.