Home Theater Shack Forums
Epik Subwoofers manufactures world-leading high performance subwoofers for die-hard home theater and music enthusiasts who won't settle for anything less than the best.
PacParts, Inc.: Since 1969, PacParts has been supplying quality replacement parts & accessories from the most recognized manufacturers in the Consumer Electronics Industry.
GIK Acoustics: Home audio acoustics at its best... especially when you have help from the owners right here at the Shack!  Check out their very affordable acoustic panels!
Discount Merchant:  If you need a replacement bulb for your video device... look no further... save big!
ReliableHardware.com: A Reliable Source for Case, Cabinet and Acoustical Hardware!
Fi Audio: Infinitely amazing balanced high end musicality designed drivers!
SVSound: The Sound Authority in speaker and subwoofers as well as the astounding AS EQ1 Subwoofer Equalizer!
Elite Screens offers the finest in affordable projection screens.
Creative Sound Solutions: Loudspeaker kits and components for subwoofers, midwoofers, woofers and full range speakers!
Emotiva is your Home Theater Component Source for Audiophile Quality Home Theater Equipment at Factory Direct Prices
RAM Electronics: Audio, Video, Home Theater and Computer Cables.
Ultimate Home Entertainment: Providing home theater seating and accessories such as popcorn machines and signage... at very affordable prices!
Go Back   Home Theater Systems - Electronics and Forum - HomeTheaterShack > Home Theater Installation and Systems > Home Audio Acoustics
Room EQ WizardBFD Guide
Forgot Password?
Favorites Home Theater Links Donations Image Gallery

Home Audio Acoustics

I have a BAD room null...

Discuss I have a BAD room null... in the Home Theater Installation and Systems forum; I have a BAD room null... Hey all, I have a terrible null in my living room when my equipment is oriented one way (the one ...

GIK Acoustics

 Reply     Post New Thread
Views: 793 - Replies: 30  
Thread Tools
Old 06-06-09, 09:02 PM   #1
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
I have a BAD room null...


Hey all,
I have a terrible null in my living room when my equipment is oriented one way (the one way that works with my projector of course) and I had a simple question.

My simple question is, can treating a room get rid of (or move) a null?

If it matters, the null is around 60hz, and actually its quite large. Its easy enough to move around and hear the sound come back or when I orient the equipment another way (that doesn't work with my projector) full sound comes back. Its so bad I don't need to measure anything to notice the dead zone.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Alt Advertisement
Old 06-07-09, 02:37 AM   #2
Senior Shackster
Alias: bigbadbill
Loc: Newcastle NSW
User: #26128
Since: Sep 2008
Posts: 311
  robbo266317 is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


What size is the room and what options do you have to locate the speakers?


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 08:55 AM   #3
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Hey Robbo'
The room is roughly 17x13 and one side is 100% open to my kitchen. The null is found when sitting across the short end of the room (the end that gives me a huge wall to mount a screen on) and there are not many options for speaker locations as they are floor standing models.

On the other hand if I sit using the long 17' length of the room, the null is moved and away from the seating area but that wall has 2 windows and would require a drop-down screen, which I'd like to avoid hence the question if I can just move or eliminate the null.

Either way, as I mentioned I have floor standing speakers for the front and back so while I have some wiggle room for placement, it is not huge and doesn't seem to eliminate the null which of course is right over the seating.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 01:43 PM   #4
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Quote:
bayn wrote: View Post
My simple question is, can treating a room get rid of (or move) a null?
It absolutely can!

I had a horrible null around 110Hz in my room. TrueRTA, a 6" bass trap and a whole lot of patience during a trial-and-error process yielded the most unlikely location for that bass trap. Thankfully, it also yielded perfect results.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 06:50 PM   #5
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Great news Zing!
I was unsure if treatments could fix the issue or if they could affect but not resolve it.

Any way of finding out if treatments will work before buying? I intend on buying a full treatment setup eventually but this room is not really conducive for them so I was holding off and black treatments in a white room stand out . I think all I can really put into place is maybe 2 sets of corner traps (stacked, in the front 2 corners) since I don't have any other corners; so is there any way to figure out if those bass traps will affect the null before buying?

Not that I can't store the traps if they don't affect this but I'd rather just wait until I get a room before buying all matching traps if this room is a loss or I need more traps to get rid of the null.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 07:49 PM   #6
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


You'll have no way of knowing, with any degree of certainty, where a trap needs to be placed in order to fix the null in your room. A corner is a good place to start but it's not the be-all-end-all location. That was my point about the unlikely location for my bass trap - it wasn't in a corner - but rather in the center of my front wall near the floor (essentially behind and below my center speaker).

Honestly, some sort of analyzing software would benefit you the most. Then, and only then, will you be able to know precisely what plagues your room's response and what the best corrective action will be. It could be something as simple (and as free) as speaker and/or sub positioning. You'd be surprised what just a few inches closer or further from a boundary will do to the response of your room.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 08:03 PM   #7
Shack Administrator
Platinum Supporter
Alias: Wayne
Wayne A. Pflughaupt's Avatar
Loc: Katy, Texas
User: #8
Since: Apr 2006
Posts: 3,608
  Wayne A. Pflughaupt is online now    
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Quote:
bayn wrote: View Post
If it matters, the null is around 60hz, and actually its quite large.
ne.
What exactly do you mean by "large?" A true null - one that can't be readily equalized - is typically narrow, but deep. Those will typically only respond to bass traps or relocating the speaker.

If its broad and spans, between say, 40 and 80 Hz, problems like that can usually be dealt with with an equalizer (assuming we're talking about a subwoofer, of course).

Regards,
Wayne


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 08:51 PM   #8
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Well I do have REW, and have used it but I couldn't read much out of it. Best course of action may be to take more measurements and then just post them for some assistance in the REW forum first.

Second I mentioned it was "large" by the spectrum it seems to cover.
It affects both my subs and main speakers and as I mentioned you can easily tell the impact/sound of both sets of speakers are affected.

For my sub's I have dual MFW-15's from AV123 and they are quite capable, though when standing in the null you can barely hear or feel them but silverware in the kitchen can be heard rattling around. The speakers are a set of Rocket 850's with other rockets and the same situation happens where gain needs to be increased just to get back up to around a 75db calibration but impact and sound is still nothing compared to other positions. (What I'm describing then IS a null right?)

If I run a sweep, are there tell-tale things to look for that will direct me to speaker location or EQing vs. buying treatments? How will I be able to isolate the graph to so I can "see" what I'm hearing and point to the problem and perhaps a fix? Again I don't mind buying treatments its just the room is horrible and I'm not sure going to the "next step" in it would be worth it right now.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 09:43 PM   #9
Shack Administrator
Platinum Supporter
Alias: Wayne
Wayne A. Pflughaupt's Avatar
Loc: Katy, Texas
User: #8
Since: Apr 2006
Posts: 3,608
  Wayne A. Pflughaupt is online now    
Re: I have a BAD room null...



Quote:
Well I do have REW, and have used it but I couldn't read much out of it. Best course of action may be to take more measurements and then just post them for some assistance in the REW forum first.
We’re here to help. We don’t bite!

REW is definitely your first course of action. Otherwise you’re shooting blind as to where in the frequency spectrum the problem is, how wide/narrow it is, and/or exactly where in the room it’s located. The problem you mentioned standing in the null, for instance – bad as it sounds, it’s really only a problem if it’s evident at your listening position. REW can help us determine those things, and it’d help guys like Zing with acoustics treatment experience determine if it’s something treatment could resolve.

But we can’t do much of anything for you without some graphs! That’s the first place to start.

Regards,
Wayne


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-07-09, 09:43 PM   #10
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


First of all, a null looks like this:



Look at the yellow trace. Do you see the three lowest points (approximately 35Hz, 61Hz and 115Hz)? Those are nulls at those frequencies, a sudden and severe drop in SPL.

Now that I know you're using dual subs, I'm guessing they're the biggest culprit. A null is typically caused by competing signals of the same frequency and thereby cancel each other out. Increasing the gain will only make it worse! I'd almost guarantee you could significantly improve, if not completely correct, your issue by correctly adjusting the phase of your subs.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-08-09, 01:19 AM   #11
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


I'll check and pull out my REW stuff to try and run a few sweeps, see what I get. Now that I see what i'm looking for I can try to isolate it.

I'm curious. Assuming that I see one or more dips, they could not only be affecting each other (bass wise) but also affecting the main's too? (If the freq/null is high enough?)

I'm going to run some default sweeps per the instructions on the REW forums (I have also a mic so I should be able to run the full thing) and post up asap. Any other info you can throw my way? As in "Try a sweep this way and that way" so I can get as much info for you guys as possible?

=== edit ===


I posted some of my REW graphs a while ago when I first got this setup and it looks like that IS a null between 70 and 100hz.
I'm still going to try and get some new graphs but that is the exact setup that is having the problem. Any thoughts with the graphs? Is there a good way to check/set phase using REW or any other methods?




Last edited by bayn; 06-08-09 at 02:10 AM..

Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-08-09, 04:16 AM   #12
Senior Shackster
Alias: bigbadbill
Loc: Newcastle NSW
User: #26128
Since: Sep 2008
Posts: 311
  robbo266317 is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


You will need to set the "default"settings to 15-200 Hz
there's an icon top right to do this.
Resubmit when done.

That is a major hole. Have you tried simply reversing the phase of the subs?


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-08-09, 06:54 AM   #13
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Your null is only about a half octave wide. That's almost EQ territory but not quite. You should look at some other options first and I'd start with your crossover setting. You could experiment with a setting of 70-60Hz (your 850s won't have a problem with that) to see if that helps and by how much. You could also try 90-100Hz (your MFW-15s won't have trouble with that). Be sure to take a measurment after each change. I'd guess the lower setting will yield the smoother response.

I'd also suggest moving your subs (even just one of them). If you can, pull them out a bit from the walls. Frankly, since you have two, you're not lacking in output capability. As such, they really don't need to be in or near a corner. Corners offer the lowest extension and the highest output but seldom offer the smoothest response. Co-locating would be something worth considering too.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-08-09, 11:04 AM   #14
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Robbo,
Yeah, i'll need to set the graph correctly but you are correct in setting the phasing of the subs as I have not tried that yet.
Should the first option be to try just 1 sub by itself to see if the dip is gone or not as large? (I'm guessing this may immediately show if phase plays a large part in it.)

Zing - I've never eq'ed anything, would my emotiva mmc-1 pre be able to do that or would I need another device to properly eq the sound? I don't believe I've ever seen settings for adjusting eq'ing anywhere in it but as a newbie I may not know what to look for.

Thanks for the help guys, I now have some stuff to go on to see if I can eliminate the dip. Of course being a Monday, it seems now that the soonest I can look at this will be Tuesday evening or Wednesday but I'll play with these tips and try to have graphs with results by tomorrow or the day after.
Thanks for the help!


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-08-09, 05:37 PM   #15
Senior Shackster
Alias: bigbadbill
Loc: Newcastle NSW
User: #26128
Since: Sep 2008
Posts: 311
  robbo266317 is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


It's a good idea to measure each seperately and see if it is an interaction between them or the room.
And as Zing says you can move the subs and see if it helps.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-10-09, 09:15 PM   #16
Senior Shackster
Alias: Fred
User: #20762
Since: May 2008
Posts: 256
  fredk is online now  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


It looks like you have a number of options for tackling that null. Do your subs have variable phase adjustment or is it just a switch? I have seen it suggested that you can also use the distance setting on your receiver to make slight phase adjustments.

How did you originally determine the location of your subs? One aproach I have seen is to find the best location for one sub, and then try different locations with the sub to smooth the response.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-10-09, 10:19 PM   #17
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Good tips Fredk,
the location was pretty much in keeping them with the front's and they do have a phase adjustment knob on them so I can tackle that. I had some work stuff come up so hopefully this weekend I can tackle some of this quickly.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 05:34 PM   #18
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Ok, so I took new measurements and these are with 1 sub disconnected (each side) and with both on.
Also the phase has been adjusted on each and measurements taken but not shown here but so far I could not really adjust either of these null's.

When looking at the pictures the first null occurs at 71-74db and the larger one happens at 103 at the lowest point. Currently the crossover is set to be 80 and the subs are located about 34" apart. They sit between the two front mains so it looks like " LF sub C sub RF ".

It doesn't look like either sub specifically is the problem if the graph does not change with either on/off does it?

Both subs on, with phase set differently:


Right sub disconnected:


Left sub disconnected:


Finally, this is a sweep with both subs off, I dont know if it will help seeing how they react on their own but you guys know way more than I do about this stuff


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 05:53 PM   #19
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Excellent work there, Mr. Bayn!

It's my opinion (and you know what they say about opinions) that your null problems lie solely with speaker/sub locations and their interaction with the room. At this point, there are only two more things you can do.

The first is to experiment with location. Move a speaker out further away from a boundary (rear and/or side wall) and run the sweep again. Then move it closer to a boundary and run the sweep. If you haven't found any improvement, then it's time to experiment with acoustic treatment. Fret not. Though you'll encounter a slight expense, it will yield the results you seek.

The least expensive option will be the DIY route. The most common approach is burlap from a fabric store and some Owens Corning 703 from a home improvement store. You want three 2" thick panels to make a 6" thick trap. Personally, I went with Rockboard 60 (rigid mineral wool) because of its higher NRC rating at lower frequncies and a ReadyTraps bag. But there's a plethora of options available to you if your go the pre-made route.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 05:55 PM   #20
Shack Administrator
Platinum Supporter
Alias: Wayne
Wayne A. Pflughaupt's Avatar
Loc: Katy, Texas
User: #8
Since: Apr 2006
Posts: 3,608
  Wayne A. Pflughaupt is online now    
Re: I have a BAD room null...



Neither one looks bad, really. Equalization might even help the one between 70-80 Hz, although Zings advice to experiment with placement is good (assuming that's an option). It appears that your bass management isn’t working well on the mains, though...

Regards,
Wayne


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 06:01 PM   #21
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Quote:
Wayne A. Pflughaupt wrote: View Post

It appears that your bass management isn’t working well on the mains, though...

Silly question - you're not using a crossover on one or both of the subs in addition to the one in your processor, are you Bayn?


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 06:46 PM   #22
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


As far as I know, no.
Both are set as high as possible on the subs, then using the xo on the pre, it is now set to 80.
I will try to play with the crossover and see if it changes anything with the graph and I may also try to move one of the subs. Looks like i'll just have to get my hands dirty and then hit the graph button again!


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 06:56 PM   #23
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Quote:
bayn wrote: View Post
As far as I know, no.
Both are set as high as possible on the subs,
Are they defeatable? Can you simply bypass them altogether?


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 07:09 PM   #24
Shackster
Alias: bayn
Loc: Austin
User: #22235
Since: Jun 2008
Posts: 16
  bayn is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Wayne, what do you mean by "your bass management isn’t working well on the mains"? Does that mean the cross over isnt set right?

In looking at the part of the graph, just past 100, shouldnt they be "picking up" the sound faster? Does that mean the cross over is set too low on the subs and too high on the speakers causing that dip? I'm just trying to make sense of what i'm seeing.

Zing, no as far as I know I can not bypass them using the LFE port on the subs, but I thought using the crossover on the pre would limit what is sent to each, no?


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
Old 06-12-09, 07:17 PM   #25
Shackster
Alias: Zing
Zing's Avatar
Loc: Northwest, PA
User: #31504
Since: Jan 2009
Posts: 19
  Zing is offline  
Re: I have a BAD room null...


Quote:
bayn wrote: View Post

Zing, no as far as I know I can not bypass them using the LFE port on the subs, but I thought using the crossover on the pre would limit what is sent to each, no?
If you're using the LFE inputs on the subs, it's very likely that the subs' crossover controls are indeed being bypassed.

And yes, setting your XO in your pro limits what's directed to the subs. But remember - a crossover is NOT a brick wall. Just because you have your pro set to 80, your subs may start playing a 100Hz signal, just not very loud. Equally, as the signal decreases past 80Hz, your mains are still playing a 60Hz signal, it's just that their output decreases as the fequency decreases.


Forum Rules Reply With Quote
 Reply     Post New Thread

« Home Theater Shack > Home Theater Installation and Systems > Home Audio Acoustics »

« Previous Thread   Next Thread »

Bookmarks

Tags
null..., room
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads... You may not post replies... You may not post attachments... You may not edit your posts

BB code is On... Smilies are On... [IMG] code is On... HTML is not allowed!




Parts Express: The #1 Internet source for all your DIY and electronics needs!

Ultimate Home Entertainment



This site is best viewed with a screen resolution of 1280 x 1024 or higher!

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:18 PM.



Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Vendor Tools vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.

Copyright ©2006 - 2009, Home Theater Shack, LLC.
John Mulcahy and Sonnie Parker - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED!



Projector Screens   AV Carts   Lectern   WhiteBoards   Audio Video   HDMI Cables   Multimedia   AV Blog
Massage Chairs   Wall Fountains   Bath Vanities   Electric Fireplaces   Bunk Beds
Dish Network





Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327