Description

The primary goal of this room and equipment is to create a dedicated listening room purposed to optimize music playback. Software consists of SACD discs, a music server containing DSD and high resolution Flac files, and ripped RBCD's.

A house addition that included a dedicated media room was completed February 2015.

Acoustic Frontiers (Nyal Mellor) established the optimum room size consistent with the house addition, designed the room acoustics and provided optimum inside wall dimensions.

The media room acoustic "foundation" consists of an isolated wall system comprised of 130 Kinetics IsoMax clips attached to 1-1/2" furring strips nailed to CBS blocks on all four walls. 440 linear feet of 25mm hat channel is supported by the isolation clips. R-11 open faced fiberglass (3-1/2" thickness) fills the empty areas between the CBS walls and drywall. Soundboard XP damped drywall is attached to the hat channel. Acoustic sealant seals the areas between the top, bottom, corner areas of the damped drywall.

The ceiling utilizes Soundboard XP attached to the ceiling joists. The media room attic has R-38 fiberglass insulation. A knee-wall with attached R30 fiberglass insulation separates the media room attic and the original structure interior attic area.

The A/V electronics are served by a dedicated 100A electrical sub-panel with (4) 20A circuits and 20A Furutech GTX-D duplex receptacles. Twisted pair wiring (#12) is used for each circuit with the neutral and hot wires wrapped on 2" centers and the ground wire placed parallel in PVC conduit. A paper presented at the 2010 AES 129th Convention shows this method has the lowest ground voltage induction tested.

The media room has a dedicated 1-1/2 ton A/C system. Large exhaust ducts in each room corner, and a large return duct on the rear ceiling leading to the air handler/evaporator minimizes room noise.

Acoustic Frontiers incorporated my existing Rives Audio ceiling "clouds" and using room dimensions and frequency measurements specified the interior room acoustic products and locations. The acoustic design creates a flatter frequency response; lowers the room reverberation time; and provides bass trapping. Clarity, sound staging, and imaging are all improved while keeping the room as live as possible.

The interior acoustic panel positioning:
- Ceiling: (4) 6'x6' wood frame acoustic "clouds" hung with all thread from the ceiling joists room centered. Each wood frame consists of (4) 2'x4' RPG BAD panels supported by the frame support structure. UltraTouch R19 sound absorption batts are placed on top of the structure.
- Front wall: (2) 39"x59" RPG Modex type 1 plates (outward positions), (2) 39"x59" RPG Modex broadband panels (inward positions). Panels with 6" spacing except at side walls, hung 23" from floor.
- Side walls: (3) 2'x2' RPG BAD ARC panels @ the L/R wall first reflection points; (3) 2'x2' Listen Audio natural birch diffusers @ the L/R 2nd reflection points; (3) 2'x2' Listen Audio natural birch diffusers flanking the listening positions on the R sidewall and behind the listening positions on the L sidewall. All panels hung 18" from floor.
- Rear wall: (1) 6'x6'x12"d absorber box (R38 fiberglass filled) centered. The existing floor standing RPG BAD panel templates wrapped with acoustic cloth attached to the front of the absorber box. The absorber box is hung 26" from the floor.

Room dimensions, equipment positions, D3 Measurements: see Media Room Floor Plan drawing in photos.

A JL Audio F212v2 subwoofer has been volume matched and phase degrees aligned with a 90Hz crossover, DARO applied. DH Labs SubSonic II RCA cables are connected to the F212v2 from the JL Audio CR-1. The CR-1 is set with a 24 dB octave slope. The (3) D3 bass ports have are plugged with closed cell poly foam to prevent front wall reflections. The system has a palpable low end that blends completely with the stereo speakers. The stereo amp no longer has to support low bass, and the mids and highs from my D3s are appreciable improved.

A JVC RS2000 front projector is suspended from the rear ceiling; Definitive Technology SR-8080BP surrounds are hung on rear left/right walls 6' above the listening position, and a DaLite JKP Affinity 16:9 (67.5 X 120" viewing area) motorized screen hung from ceiling at the front wall.

A solid "system foundation" ensures optimum performance of audio equipment:
- precise stereo speaker positioning relative to front, back, parallel walls; the listening position; and away from obstacles;
- Room acoustics designed to minimize sound reflections and room modes that can "smear" audio and create spikes and nulls;
- a 100A sub-panel with (4) Dedicated 20A A/V circuits;
- Synergistic cabling (PC's, IC's, SC's) ensures design continuity throughout the electrical path;
- Resonance control to isolate audio equipment EMI and vibration.

Thick wool area rugs with jute are used to partially cover wood floor surfaces at the rear wall, and between the listening position and speakers.

White LED strip lights at the outside perimeter of the ceiling "clouds" provide general purpose room lighting. Blue LED strip lights around inside perimeter of the ceiling "clouds" provide mood lighting.

Read more...

Room Details

Dimensions: 19’ × 15’  Medium
Ceiling: 11’


Components Toggle details

    • Raidho D3 Speakers
    (1) sealed ribbon tweeter; (1) 100 mm Diamond Midrange driver; (3) 115 mm Diamond Bass drivers; Piano Black
    • Boulder 1160
    PEAK POWER, 8 OHMS, 300W; 4 OHMS, 600W; 2 OHMS, 1200W
    Output power can drive any reasonable loudspeaker to realistic levels.
    • JL Audio Fathom 212V2
    Powered, sealed-box subwoofer. Drive-units: two 12-W7 12" cone woofers with 3.5"-diameter voice-coil and 3" peak–peak excursion:
    - Amplifier: switching, class-D, 3600W RMS short-term;
    - Dimensions: 31.96" H X 14.92" W X 20.39" D. Effective cabinet volume: 574 in;
    - Weight: 224 lbs;
    - DMA-Optimized Motor System;
    - DARO optimizing system;
    - LP Frequency/slope adjustment;
    - ELF adjustment;
    - Phase Alignment 47 degrees
    • EMM Labs DV2 Integrated D/A Converter
    • Proprietary & discrete dual differential D-to-A converters (MDAC2™)
    • New high resolution volume control system with automatic output gain control (VControl™)
    • Latest generation Meitner Digital Audio Translator signal processing technology (MDAT2™)
    • Enhanced technology for instant signal acquisition and jitter-free performance (MFAST™)
    • Proprietary asynchronous clocking system (MCLK2™)
    • USB interface with custom hardware galvanic isolation isolates the DAC from any dirt that may be passed along from the external source. Asynchronous input circuitry now supports PCM up to 24-bit/192kHz, DSD, 2xDSD, DXD (352/384 kHz), and MQA via the USB input.
    • User controlled signal polarity
    • Custom aerospace-grade ceramic circuit boards
    • EMM Optilink for connection to an EMM transport

      Excellent writeup of EMM Labs design philosophy and build quality:
      https://6moons.com/audioreview_articles/ansuz/
    • EMM Labs XDS1v2 SACD/CD Transport
    Used exclusively as a CD/SACD transport using EMM Labs OptiLink cable (AT&T fiber optic).
    The XDS1 retains these capabilities as a stand alone device:
    2-channel CD/SACD/DAC, discrete Class A circuitry, all output.
    - 2014 V2 factory upgrade, all new COAXIAL, TOSLINK, AES and USB inputs. Each able to support up to 24bit 192kHz. USB input also supports DSD streaming as well;
    - 2015 MDAT2 firmware upgrade, an improved new DSP engine with:
    • Increased sonic detail from all digital audio streams (PCM and DSD) using new high-resolution algorithms.
    • Time and frequency response filters that are greatly optimized.
    • A new signal processing engine built for very high-precision audio up-sampling (2xDSD up-conversion).
    • A new more accurate 2 x DSD up-sampling algorithm.
    • Ansuz Acoustics Mainz8 D-TC
    Greatly improved the sound dynamics and articulation. Ansuz offers four price levels of these power distributors: Mainz 8 A2, C2, D2, DTC.

    Ansuz dislikes power conditioners based on transformers, capacitors, and inductors. Instead of filtering AC, their open coils attenuate the peaks of transients atop the 50/60Hz wave to soften the HF spikes and change the shape of the noise. A transient in a coil creates a current which the counter-rotating coil cancels.

    Excellent writeup of Ansuz power conditioning and distribution philosophy and implementation:
    https://6moons.com/audioreview_articles/ansuz/
    • JL Audio CR-1
    CR-1 acts an audiophile-grade “bridge”, seamlessly connecting a two-channel audio system with a top-flight, powered subwoofer system. Powerful features and a pristine, all-analog signal path make it a key component in optimizing an audio system’s spatial and spectral performance.

    Stereo frequencies <91 Hz from the EMM Labs DV2 XLR output are redirected from the Raidho D3s to the JL Audio F212v2. The CR-1 also uses the Integra DTC-9.8 full range stereo to reproduce movie soundtracks.

    Eliminated transient intermodulation distortion in the JRDG 625 and Raidho D3s, JRDG 625 has more current reserve to produce mids-highs, D3s reproduce cleaner and more dynamic mids-highs.
    • Ansuz T2s
    (6) Resonance Control
    - (3) EMM Labs DV2;
    - (3) Ansuz Mainz8 DTC Power Distributor
    • Ansuz Acoustics Darkz DTC
    (6) Resonance control:
    - (3) EMM Labs XDS1v2
    - (3) JL Audio CR-1
    • Ansuz Acoustics Darkz Diamond
    (5) Darkz D resonance control supporting:
    - (3) Pioneer BDP-62FD Blu-ray Player;
    - (2) Adcom Amplifier
    • Nordost Ti Pulsar Points
    (12) Resonance control:
    - (8) Raidho D3
    - (3) Marantz 7705 Pre/Pro
    - (1) Unused
    • SolidTech ROS Ref 4 Equipment Rack
    Used with Ultrasonic acrylic led shelves for additional stability, resonance control, and -aesthetics, to support:
    - Toshiba Laptop (music server)
    - EMM Labs XDS1;
    - EMM Labs DV2;
    - JL Audio CR-1
    • Toshiba Portege R825-P70
    Windows 10 based laptop optimized as music server using JRiver MC19. Connected to EMM Labs DV2 via 1M Kimber Kable AG USB B-bus.

    The EMM Labs XDS1v2 software removed and the DV2 USB software applied.
    • Ansuz Acoustics C2 1.5M XLR IC
    EMM Labs DV2->JL Audio CR-1
    • Nordost Valhalla 5M XLR IC
    JL Audio CR-1->Boulder 1160
    • Kimber Kable AG USB B Bus
    Toshiba laptop music server->EMM Labs DV2.
    • Nordost Valhalla-2 4M Speaker Cable/spades
    Boulder 1160->Raidho D3s
    • Ansuz Acoustics C2 2M 15A PC
    Furutech GTX-D NCF->Mainz8 D-TC Power Distributor;
    Mainz8 D-TC Power Distributor->EMM Labs DV2
    • Ansuz Acoustics A2 2M PC
    (2) Ansuz A2 Power cords:
    - Ansuz Mainz8 D-TC->EMM Labs XDS1v2
    - Ansuz Mainz8 D-TC->JL Audio CR-1
    • Nordost Valhalla 2M 15A PC
    20A Duplex Receptacle->JL Audio F212v2
    • DH Labs Sub-Sonic II
    JL Audio CR-1->JL Audio F212v2
    • DH Labs Silver Sonic BL1 Series II
    (2 RCA) Integra DTC 9.8 AVP->JL Audio CR-1 (stereo L/R)
    (2 XLR) Spare
    (2 RCA) Spare
    • DH Labs Silver Sonic BL-1 Series I
    (2 RCA) Integra DTC 9.8 AVP->Acurus 200X3 amplifier (rear surrounds).
    • Furutech GTX-D NCF(R)
    includes 104-D carbon fiber finished outlet cover, and GTX aluminum CNC processed chassis; shields against RFI (Radio Frequency Interference). Material thickness: chassis plate 13.0mm. Finish non-resonant coating. Special Teflon damping foil and SUS Receptacle fixed screw 4 pcs (M3) and SUS Plate fixed screw 2 pcs (50mm overall length). • Dimensions: 135.0mm (L) x 86.0mm (W) x 13.0m
    • SolidTech Radius Solo 3 Rack
    Supports:
    - Integra DTC-9.8;
    - Sony/UBP-X800 BD/Streamer;
    - Ansuz Mainz8 D-TC.
    • JVC DLA RS2000 Front Projector
    Native 4K (4096x2160) home theater projector that features new, 0.69 inch D-ILA devices coupled with a 17-element, 15-group all-glass 65mm lens. It offers dynamic contrast of 800,000:1, high brightness (1900 lumens), and a host of color reproduction features that ensure dynamic and realistic images.

    Ceiling hung.
    • DA-LITE 16:9 Tensioned Screen JKP Affiinity
    67.5 X 120" Viewing Area
    • Marantz AV7705
    • Dolby® and DTS® surround sound decoding
    • video upscaling (up to 4K) for analog and HDMI sources
    • Audyssey MultEQ® XT32 speaker calibration and system optimization
    • Marantz's Hyper Dynamic Amplifier Module (HDAM) offers improved dynamic range and detail while reducing noise
    • high-quality 32-bit DACs on all channels
    • 4K/60p and 3D video pass-through
    • 17-3/8"W x 7-5/16"H x 16-15/16"D
    • weight: 22.9 lbs.
    • Sony UBP-X800
    Ultra HD Blu-ray Player. Used to stream NetFlix and Blu-ray discs.
    • Acurus A-200 x3 Amplifier
    Used to drive B&W CCM80 rear surround speakers.
    • Definitive Technology SR-8080BP
    - (2) Surround speakers mounted 1' behind and 2' above the L/R sidewalls from the listening position.
    • RPG Modex Plate
    - Modex Type 1 provides absorption from 65 Hz - 500 Hz in a surface depth of only 4 inches;
    - Modex Broadband provides absorption between 50 - 5000 Hz in a surface depth of only 4 inches.
    - Front wall: (2) 39"x 59" RPG Modex type 1 plates (outward positions), (2) 39"x 59" RPG Modex broadband panels (inward positions). Panels with 6" spacing except at side walls, hung 23" from floor.
    • RPG BAD ARC Panel
    - Hybrid absorber/diffuser panels:
    - Side walls: (3) 2'x2' RPG BAD ARC panels @ the L/R wall first reflection points.
    • Listen Audio Diffuse
    - Hybrid diffusion system panels, bandwidth scattering sound below 600 Hz:
    (3) 2'x2' Listen Audio natural birch diffusers @ the L/R 2nd reflection points; (3) 2'x2' Listen Audio natural birch diffusers flanking the listening positions on the R sidewall and behind the listening positions on the L sidewall. All panels hung 18" from floor.
    • RPG BAD Template
    (16) RPG Absorption/Diffusion templates:
    - Ceiling: (4) 6'x6' wood frame acoustic "clouds" hung with all thread from the ceiling joists room centered. Each wood frame consists of (4) 2'x4' RPG BAD panels supported by the frame support structure. UltraTouch R19 sound absorption batts are placed on top of the structure.
    - Rear wall (center): (1) 6'x6'x12"d absorber box  filled with R38 fiberglass. (3) RPG BAD panel templates wrapped with acoustic cloth attached to the front of the absorber box. The absorber box is hung 26" from the floor.
    • ASC (Acoustic Sciences Corporation) Picture Panel
    (1) ASC Absorption/Diffusion panel mounted on the left rear wall corner.
    • Kinetics IsoMax clips
    Acoustic Frontiers "floating wall" design: The walls and ceiling of the room should be used as a component of the overall acoustic design. If properly designed they can provide invisible absorption. Sound energy excites the shell into motion. The mass of the shell and depth of the air cavity form a resonant system. The motion is damped by frictional losses in the wall material. The absorption frequency can be tuned by changing the mass of the wall, the method of attachment to the structural framing members and the depth of the air cavity. Damped drywall is useful because its resonances are subdued relative to those seen in normal drywall, which tends to vibrate at around 60Hz. As in if you energize the room with a 60Hz note the drywall will keep on ringing (making sound) after the note has stopped. A single 5/8″ layer of pre-fabricated damped drywall works great as one component of a "floating" wall system. All wall and ceiling corners are sealed with acoustic caulking.

Comments 94

Beautiful room with great dimensions. I bet it sounds super holographic! Nice details on the room constructions. It will help others if they were to build their rooms. Enjoy your music!

milpai

Owner
I am finally convinced a properly integrated subwoofer is essential for all but a few very high end speakers having separate subwoofer towers.

In 2019 I bought a JL Audio F212v2 and the CR-1 crossover. JL Audio T/S helped me with positioning and setting the phase degree for my room. The subwoofer bass sounds like it's an integral part of my stereo system.

I'm now listening to music with a palpable low end. And because my stereo amp has been relieved of supporting bass, the mids and highs from my stereo speakers has appreciable improved.

I'm now a subwoofer advocate.

lwhitefl

Owner
After I decided to install a subwoofer and active crossover, I needed additional cabling. I considered more Nordost Valhalla because I've read from informed sources it's best to stay with a single manufacturer. But I've been a fan of Michael Borresen since 2011 when I first heard the Raidho line of speakers at RMAF. Borresen has a degree in physics, was a designer at Nordost and other Scandinavian audio companies, and was the designer of Raidho. Borresen and Lars Kristensen started Ansuz Acoustics a few years ago. Borresen designed Ansuz PC's and power conditioners/distributors using both physics principles and critical listening. Based on Borresen's experience with Nordost I believed the Ansuz cables would have a similar sound, and I was right.

I purchased two Ansuz PC's: one to run from the Furutech duplex wall receptacle to an Ansuz Mains8 D-TC, and the other from the Mains8 to the EMM Labs XDS1v2 together with a Ansuz C2 XLR IC to connect the XDS1 to the JRDG Corus. I also used Ansuz Darkz DTC resonance controls under the XDS1 and Mains8. That allowed me to free up a set of Nordost Ti Pulsar Points under the JL Audio CR-1 (once again reinforcing the benefit of resonance control).

I've also spent quite a lot of time precisely integrating the subwoofer phase around the 80 hz frequency so that the sub and Raidho D3s sound as one. The power and sub changes improved the dynamics and resolution of the music playback where I can now hear very subtle parts of the music reproduction such as the reverberation of strings and drum kits, sound wave from cymbals, and the air from brass instruments. The improved dynamics have also added a more lifelike character to both instruments and vocalists.

I resisted inserting a subwoofer and crossover into my system for years believing the main speakers could perform that function well - they simply can't except for perhaps a few at the very top end. And while I knew good power was very important (it's what we hear), it turns out I should have prioritized improvements to A/C over other cabling much more. It's taken me a very long time to get to this point, but with well recorded material I can really hear deeply into the music now with a commensurate emotional improvement. Music is so important!

lwhitefl

Owner
I've owned a number of very good speakers in my life, but only one actually produced bass that got my attention. That was back in the 1980's with the Infinity Beta system that had separate bass and  separate mid-high frequency towers. That is until I recently installed a JL Audio F212v2 and CR1 Active Crossover in my system.

The bass is now not only prodigious, but after adjusting for phase alignment has a timbre complimenting the main speakers. The Raidho D3 imaging has been spectacular from the beginning, but now the mids and highs have an airiness and definition that makes the instruments and voices sound like they're suspended in air.

JL Audio customer service has been phenomenally patient and knowledgeable helping me integrate the subwoofer with the main speakers. It's been too long ago to remember any real detail of the Infinity Beta, just a general impression of awesomeness. But I think the setup I have now has a full range impressiveness not unlike what I remember with the Beta's.

When the room was being designed I was told there are few speakers at any price point that wouldn't benefit from a well integrated subwoofer with a crossover. I'm now a believer.

lwhitefl

Awesome room and set up. Still in Hobe Sound? Reached out to you a long time ago, I live in Port St. Lucie. Would love to hear your set up someday.

himiguel

Owner
I've ordered a JL Audio CR-1 Analog crossover. It will reroute frequencies <90hz from my Raidho C3 to my JL Audio F212v2 sub. I expect it will take some time to get it right, but this change will improve the quality of the sound emensly. Read my update of the system description describing the equipment. I'll repost when the integration is complete. Exciting🙃

lwhitefl

Owner
Last week I added a JL Audio Fathom F212v2 subwoofer to replace my Definitive Technology SC8000. The F212v2 is positioned near the left rear corner based on my Acoustic Frontiers (Nyal Mellor) room design. I used the D.A.R.O technology that uses a powerful on-board DSP to automatically optimize the subwoofer's in-room frequency response. During the next several days I tweaked the LP @ 60Hz with a 24 dB/octave slope and -3dB ELF trim. With these adjustments the sub integrates well with the stereo speakers. The F212v2 has strikinly improved the timbre and authority of bass over the SC8000. Standing bass, drum kits, and even a Fender Rhodes actually have definition in the lower registers. I'm going to listen to this configuration for a few months, but I'm still planning on adding a JL Audio CR1 crossover "dialed in" by Nyal. I'm convinced the bass in all but a very few main speakers is inconsequential compared to the mid and high frequencies. Let the main speakers handle those frequencies coupled with a great subwoofer for the low frequencies. In all but a very few cases this configuration will create better sound and considerably more enjoyment than spending a fortune trying to get good bass out of stereo speakers. I could have used D2's or possibly D1's rather than D3's to get the incredible resolution, articulation, and 3-dimensional imaging.

lwhitefl

Awesome room and system - i saw you had a Lindemann 855 for sale a ways back? Couple questions - do you still own it? Is it a good amp? I have a Pass Labs X350.5 amp that I love but its so big and my room isn't dedicated so want to a get a smaller amp but just as good amp or maybe better. Plus i have a chance to get the matching preamp so was wondering if you share a little about the amp. Thanks

fsmithjack

Owner
My understanding has been an external crossover is required to control both the sub and main speakers to properly integrate low/mid level frequencies. Thus I had been considering buying a JL Audio CR1 crossover and possibly a matching e-sub.

Instead I decided to try using one channel from my JRDG Corus to the line level input of my Definitive Technology SC8000 sub setting the crossover point 40 Hz. I had previously only used the sub which is located in the rear of my room for movies surround sound.

Since I'm using only the subs internal crossover, full bass is still being sent to the front speakers. I expected to hear bass overhang, but to my surprise there's very little to my ear. The low/mid frequency integration may be better with an external crossover, but this change has made a significant difference with my stereo listening. Not only am I now hearing tight low level bass with punch, but the soundstage sounds even bigger.

I'm now planning on buying a pair of reasonably priced DH Labs subwoofer cables to feed both line level sub channels from the Corus. Although both Stereo channels are mono and contain the same frequency output, I understand using both channels provides more gain.

lwhitefl

Owner
I agree the power cords make a significant difference. I'm using a V2 2M pc to my amp and a V1 to my Qbase 4. I'll have to look into the Nordost trade-up program since I would like to change all my pc's to V2. Thanks Ron.

I can attest building a dedicated room with good acoustics made a world of difference. When my audio system was in the FR any type of upgrade was more subtle and less satisfying.

lwhitefl

Love your system and room. I recently upgraded my Tyr 2 speaker cables to V 2  (4 meters) and heard a big improvement. I then decided to purchase an Odin (V1) power cord to power my Qbase 4. That was a bigger improvement in sound quality. I got the Odin through the Nordost trade up program at fraction of retail. The Odin changed the overall tonal balance of my system from lean to a 3D richness I never thought possible. I am now working on my room. I think you did it right (putting so much effort into room and acoustics). Congratulation on a job well done!

ron17

Owner
It's been 2+ weeks since I upgraded to the Valhalla V2 speaker cables. This change produced obviously better articulation, and instrument specificity in terms of timbre and soundstage placement. I can't actually say this was a cost effective improvement given the cost of the Valhalla V2, but there's no question it has raised my listening enjoyment.

lwhitefl

Owner
I just received Nordost Valhalla V2 4M speaker cables to replace my Nordost Valhalla 2M speaker cables. I'll start listening today and post my thoughts after the cables are fully broken in.

lwhitefl

I love your system. I have the JR 625 S2 and swear it's the best/last amp I'll own!

ricred1

Owner
I had JRDG upgrade my 625 amplifier to the S2 level. I received the unit yesterday and listened for about 5 hours last night. The 625 was really good before, but the S2 version is even more analog sounding and organic - more presence and impact.

lwhitefl

Great system! If not a secret, what power setting the lamp in the projector you are using?

alex1973

Owner
Installed Furutech bundle: GTX-D NCF(R) duplex receptacle, GTX Wallframe, and GTX Carbon Fiber Outlet Cover. This receptacle serves all ancillary equipment on the two SolidTech racks at the left rear wall.

lwhitefl

Owner
Upgraded the Raidho C3 with the D3. The resolution and dynamics are at least twice that of the C3. Will update with pictures once Audiogon virtual systems app allows.

lwhitefl

Owner
beta testing new virtual systems

lwhitefl

Owner
Owner
I've created a separate virtual system page for the room acoustics, and posted current pictures showing the interior room acoustic panels. See "Len's Media Room Acoustics".

I'll edit my other virtual system to remove the acoustic descriptive bits and change the pictures to audio video equipment. I'm currently unable to use the Audiogon edit function for my virtual system pages.

lwhitefl

Owner
The RPG modex type 1 (outside positions) and modex broadband (inside positions) have arrived. They've been temporarily placed on the front wall floor roughly at the horizontal positions they will occupy when hung on the wall 23" above the floor.

The RPG BAD ARC panels have arrived. They've been temporarily placed on the side wall floors at the first reflection points. They will be hung in the same vertical alignment as the Listen Audio birch diffusor panels.

The installer will hang all panels on the wall this coming week.

Acoustic Frontiers (Nyal) told me I'm only hearing about 70% of the improvement with the panels on the floor. I can clearly hear the room's reverberation time has been significantly lowered, voice and instrument articulation and soundstage definition has improved, the low end is tighter and more pronounced.

Unfortunately I can't post pictures on my virtual system page. The Audiogon staff is telling me they're working on a problem with that portion of the website.

I have posted the pictures here:

http://www.whatsbestforum.com/album.php?albumid=129

lwhitefl

Owner
The RPG modex plates for the front wall and RPG BAD ARC panels for the side wall first reflection points have finally shipped. They're scheduled to arrive next week and will be installed the following week completing the foundation and internal acoustic design for the media room.

I'll post some new pictures after the installation. And I'll post my listening impressions a few days later.

lwhitefl

Wow, fantastic room and components. The room makes such a huge difference in evaluating changes in a system as you know.

statman

Owner
System edited: The rear wall absorber box (48"Hx60"Wx12"D) was installed today. The inside is filled with (3) R38 fiberglass open faced batts, and the front panels consist of (3) RPG BAD templates wrapped in acoustic cloth.

lwhitefl

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