MartinLogan Aerius i [10/28] Coustics
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10 Room Acoustics
This is one of those areas that requires both a little back-
ground to understand and some time and experimentation
to attain the best performance from your system.
Your room is actually a component and an important part
of your system. This component is a very large variable
and can dramatically add to, or subtract from, a great
musical experience.
All sound is composed of waves. Each note has its own
wave size, with the lower bass notes literally encompassing
from 10’ feet to as much as 40’ feet. Your room participates
in this wave experience like a three dimensional pool with
waves reflecting and becoming enhanced depending on
the size of the room and the types of surfaces in the room.
Remember, your audio system can literally generate all of
the information required to recreate a musical event in
time, space, and tonal balance. The purpose of your room,
ideally, is to not contribute to that information. However,
every room does contribute to the sound, and the better
speaker manufacturers have designed their systems to
accommodate this phenomenon.
Let’s talk about a few important terms before we begin.
Terminology
Standing Waves
The parallel walls in your room will reinforce certain notes to
the point that they will sound louder than the rest of the audio
spectrum and cause “one note bass”, “boomy bass” or
“tubby bass”. For instance, 100Hz represents a 10’ feet
wavelength. Your room will reinforce that specific frequency
if one of the dominant dimensions is 10’ feet. Large objects
in the room such as cabinetry or furniture can help to minimize
this potential problem. Some serious “audiophiles” will literally
build a special room with no parallel walls just to help
eliminate this phenomenon.
Reflective Surfaces (near-field reflections)
The hard surfaces of your room, particularly if close to your
speaker system, will reflect some waves back into the room
over and over again, confusing the clarity and imaging of
your system. The smaller sound waves are mostly affected
here, and occur in the mid and high frequencies. This is
where voice and frequencies as high as the cymbals occur.
Resonant Surfaces and Objects
All of the surfaces and objects in your room are subject to
the frequencies generated by your system. Much like an
instrument, they will vibrate and “carry on” in syncopation
with the music, and contribute in a negative way to the
music. Ringing, boominess, and even brightness can occur
simply because they are “singing along” with your music.
Resonant Cavities
Small alcoves or closet type areas in your room can be
chambers that create their own “standing waves” and can
drum their own “one note” sounds.
Clap your hands. Can you hear an instant echo respond back?
You have near-field reflections. Stomp your foot on the floor.
Can you hear a “boom”? You have standing waves or large
panel resonances such as a poorly supported wall. Put your
head in a small cavity area and talk loudly. Can you hear a
booming? You’ve just experienced a cavity resonance.
Rules of Thumb
Hard vs. Soft Surfaces
If the front or back wall of your listening room is soft, it
might benefit you to have a hard or reflective wall in
opposition. The ceiling and floor should follow the same
basic guideline as well. However, the side walls should be
roughly the same in order to deliver a focused image.
This rule suggests that a little reflection is good. As a matter
of fact, some rooms can be so “over damped” with carpeting,
drapes and sound absorbers that the music system can
sound dull and lifeless. On the other hand, rooms can be
so hard that the system can sound like a gymnasium with
too much reflection and brightness. The point is that balance
is the optimum environment.
Breakup Objects
Objects with complex shapes, such as bookshelves, cabinetry
and multiple shaped walls can help break up those sonic
gremlins and diffuse any dominant frequencies.
Solid Coupling
Your loudspeaker system generates frequency vibrations
or waves into the room. This is how it creates sound.
Those vibrations will vary from 20 per second to 20,000
per second. If your speaker system is not securely planted
ROOM ACOUSTICS
Your Room
Содержание
- E r i u s 1
- U s e r s m a n u a l 1
- Contents 2
- Ontents 2
- Installation in brief 3
- Making sure that you have made a firm 3
- Nstallation i 3
- Plug them i 3
- Introduction 4
- Ntroduction 4
- Quality and will provide years of enduring enjoyment and 4
- Selected hardwoods they are then grain and color 4
- A variety of speaker cables are now available whose 5
- Ac power connection 5
- Break in 5
- Jumper clips 5
- Operation 5
- Peration 5
- Signal connection 5
- Bi wire connection 6
- E r i u s 6
- Passive bi amplification 6
- Single wire connection 6
- This method of connection replaces the jumper clips installed 6
- E r i u s 7
- Experimentation 8
- Lacement 8
- Listening position 8
- Placement 8
- The side walls 8
- The wall behind the listener 8
- The wall behind the speakers 8
- Your initial setup for the next few days as the speaker 8
- Enjoy yourself 9
- Final placement 9
- The extra tweak 9
- Coustics 10
- Room acoustics 10
- Rules of thumb 10
- Terminology 10
- Your room 10
- Dipolar speakers and your room 11
- Solid footing 11
- Controlled horizontal dispersion 12
- Controlled horizontal dispersion three major types of dispersion 12
- Controlled vertical dispersion 12
- Dispersion interactions 12
- Ispersio 12
- Nteractions 12
- Three major types of dispersion 12
- Dispersion interactions 13 13
- Heater 14
- Home theater 14
- Dvantages 15
- Electrostatic advantages 15
- Lectrostati 15
- Conventional loudspeaker martinlogan aerius i 16
- Critical zone 450hz 20khz 16
- Full range operation 16
- Curvilinear line source cl 17
- Curvilinear line source cls tm 17
- Martinlogan exclusives 17
- Transducer integrity 17
- Vapor deposited film 17
- Xclusives 17
- Advantage of the new recording medium bell labs 18
- Electrostatic loudspeaker history 18
- Istory 18
- Lectrostati 18
- Oudspeake 18
- Rice and kellogg had narrowed the field of contestants down to the cone and the electrostat 18
- Electrostatic speakers have progressed and prospered 19
- These developments allow the consumer to own the highest performance loud speaker products ever built 19
- When janszen corporation was 19
- Frequently asked questions 20
- Requentl 20
- Uestions 20
- Roubleshooting 22
- Troubleshooting 22
- General information 23
- Nformation 23
- Service 23
- Specifications 23
- Warranty and registration 23
- Warranty and registration specifications 23
- Glossary of audio terms 24
- Lossary o 24
- A r t i 28
- Back cover 28
- O g a n 28
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