
Solving
the problems of sound reflrctions in your listerning room. Experimentation
with placement is likely to be required to get the panels positioned
just right in your listening room. Fortunately, the portability
of these lightweight panels is where the Echo Busters panel makes
experimenting a simple procedure.

A: Echo Busters
B: Corner Busters
C: Double Busters
D: Bass Busters
Most rooms are rectangular and the best of these, acoustically,
have lengths that are approximately one and a half (1.5) times
the width. In other words; a 10' wide room should be roughly 15'
long, a 14' wide room would be 21' in length and so on. This has
to do with frequency interaction within the room boundaries and
these "golden ratio" rooms have the least interactive
frequencies. But any size room can be made to sound better by
using Echo Busters decorative acoustical treatments.
The
ideal placement of Echo Busters (A) absorption panels which yield
the best results, almost always includes treating the walls behind
the speakers, and the side walls in front of the speakers. This
helps to solidify the center imaging and to capture the first
reflections. The Echo Busters work by converting sound energy
that strikes the panel into mechanical energy and then dissipating
it as heat. The end result is a cleaner, less confused audio experience.
See the areas marked "A" in the above diagram.
The
Corner Busters (B) are placed in the ceiling corners. This eliminates
the "megaphone" effect corners are infamous for. Corners
are also known for having ALL frequencies eventually find their
way there. By neatly capping this corner juncture with a Corner
Buster, you'll create a surface that absorbs almost all the frequencies
that hit upon it and prevent them from being ricocheted back into
the room, amplified like a megaphone. The center of the Corner
Buster has a reflective section which allows the higher frequencies
to retain their sparkle while effectively eliminating mid-range
echoes. Even the lower frequency bass notes are somewhat tamed
due to the air space that's created behind the Corner Buster acting
as an efficient bass trap. See the areas marked "B"
in the above diagram. For more bass control, see Bass Busters.
Double
Busters (C) work best on side walls from the middle of the room
back, as well as on the rear wall behind your listening position.
Many people like to use them behind the speakers as well to create
a livelier presentation of the music. Experimentation in your
own system will ultimately tell what works best for you.
Based
on a poly-cylindrical diffusion/absorption design, Double Busters
provide excellent dispersion on both the vertical and horizontal
plane depending on the way they're mounted on the wall. When the
sound waves strike the curved surfaces of the Double Buster panel,
thousands of reflections surround you with sound and create the
illusion that the back and side walls virtually disappear.
Though
less absorbent over the entire frequency spectrum than Echo Busters,
Double Busters actually work better at lower frequencies because
of their construction. The two curved surfaces act as diaphragms
when lower frequencies activate them and transform the sound vibrations
into heat which is dissipated into the surrounding foam. See panels
marked "C" in the above diagram.
Bass
Busters (D) have many positions where they work best. Based on
the Helmholz resonator principle, Bass Busters are designed to
absorb sound in the critical 60 Hz. to 225 Hz. frequency range.
The Helmholtz resonator can be understood best by the example
of blowing across the mouth of a bottle. The low frequency tone
that you hear is the bottle's resonant frequency. When bass-heavy
music is played, the Bass Busters' resonant frequency is excited
and they resonate, or vibrate, sympathetically and wick off some
of this bass energy from the room. This allows kick drums to sound
tighter and pedal organs to sound deeper and more well-defined.
See the areas marked "D" in the diagram above.
"After
some experimenting,
I had found a placement that works well in Figure 1." Andrew
Chasin's room configuration as found in his review of Echo Busters
products named,
Listening Space: The final frontier
E-mail us for a free copy of Mr. Chasin's review
Or find a direct link to their site in "Reviews".
Figure 1.
Two Echo Busters panels were hung on the wall behind the loudspeakers
and two were placed on the sidewalls at the point of the first
reflection. The Double Busters were placed in front of the two
sliding glass doors directly behind the listening seat. This placement
diffused early rear wall reflection that may have adversely affective
imaging and soundstaging. Each of the two Bass Busters were placed
in a corner behind the loudspeakers.
If
I had to choose one word which best described the sound of the
listening room when treated with Echo Busters, it would be silence.
The treated room's ambient noise level seemed to be reduced significantly,
and reproduced music appeared to emerge from an astonishingly
black background. Silences between musical notes were more silent
then I'd heard in my listening room before.
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