Lonely Raven
Seasoned Member
  

Jack of all Trades, Master of None
Posts: 3567
|
Brian, those are awesome questions and show that you're really thinking this out (which we need more of). You're questions are really at the level of an acoustics technician, which I think is above where most, if not all of us here fall.
I've studied (casually) for years, so I could probably fudge my way through your questions, and I have some of my own opinions I've come up with through my own (only slightly scientific) testing.
Your best bet to get some answers at that level would be to check with the guys at GearSlutz.com They have an acoustics section that a couple of real acoustics techs hang out.
Which proportions exactly are you talking about in your first question? Are you talking about room proportions?
Here is the theory of room proportions and why they work.
If I recall correctly (it's been a while since I've read Steve's papers) Steve uses Fibonacci's Golden Ratio to try and get a room that *doesn't* have as many damaging nodes. Every room will have sound damaging nodes, but having a room of specific dimensions you can then avoid known problem dimensions. For example, a typical room has an 8' ceiling. You wouldn't therefor want any of your other dimensions to be a multiple of 8 because that would cause bad nodes. You probably wouldn't want the rest of the room to be even numbers as well because those even numbers would cause smaller nodes. So using Fibonacci's golden ratio, or building a room on prime numbers, you're less likely to have bad nodes due to even or common wavelengths.
I hope I'm explaining that well, I'm probably not.
If you've seen recording studios and concert halls that have non-parallel walls, that's the easy way of avoiding those common nodes. If you had a room with 8' ceilings, 16' wide and 24' long, you would have all sorts of hot spots and dead spots at those multiples. For example, you'd probably have a hot spot and/or dead spot at 2', 4', 8', 12', 16', 20' because those dimensions are all multiples of the room size. And that's just in one direction! You'd still have those same hot/dead spots left to right, and up and down! So your room would be a minefield of uneven sound.
Now, if you're room was (using prime numbers) 13' ceiling, 17' wide, and 31' feet long, you would have fewer frequencies that would be effected by the room dimensions. 13 is only divisible by itself, so you don't have hot/dead spots at multiples. Plus the other room dimensions aren't multiples of 13, nor do they have a common denominator. All that equals a room with less wave interaction, and more even sound.
There is no such thing as a room without these nodes, unless it's an anechoic chamber, or you're outdoors without any room reflections at all.
So the dimensions aren't exactly "good sounding", but less damaging.
Damn, I probably should have just started with that last line. LOL
|