From an Invited
Lecture "Sala Acustica" Given to Top Audio, The Hi
End Audio Show In Milano Italy, October, 1991 by Arthur M. Noxon,
PE, MSME, MS
The Wall in the Desert
An old saying is known in many countries "The chain
is only as strong as its weakest link." Often, when we
talk about the parts in our audio system, they are referred
to as components and interconnects in the audio chain. Each
component processes the signal and the interconnects transfer
the signal from one component to another. This is hopefully
all for the better, resulting in quality sound arriving at
our ears.
Modern audio equipment such as that found in any hi end show
or good dealer demo room is very accurate. Because this electronic
equipment comprises most but not all parts of the audio chain,
it cannot perform any better than the weakest link of the
whole audio chain. We take a few minutes of time now to illustrate
just how the final interconnect - the Room Acoustic - is not
only one of the links in the audio chain, it is the last and
the weakest link in the audio chain. What we do with this
critical audio link will also be discussed.
Listening In the Desert
The story all begins because we are people who listen to
sound. Imagine if we play a stereo in the quiet desert, the
only sound we hear would be the direct sound from the speakers.
No reflections, no noise, nothing to complicate what we hear.
This would be an anechoic space, one without echo or reflection.
Let us imagine further that we next position ourselves in
the vicinity of a large stone wall, located far behind, crossing
from back left to right. Sound from the speaker will first
pass by us, traverse a long distance and then reflect off
the wall. However, this wall is too far away and we do not
hear its reflection. Because of the distance, the sound takes
a long time to return to us and also it grows very weak -
too weak to be heard.
Next we imagine to relocate our stereo system closer to the
wall. The reflection arrives more quickly than before and
it is louder, so this time we hear an echo. Once again we
relocate even closer to the wall and the time delay for the
echo becomes smaller while the strength of the echo grows
stronger.
We can move even closer to the wall and at about 10 meters
the distinct quality of a separate echo begins to disappear
even though the reflection is stronger than ever before. And
by 8 meters distance the echo effect has completely disappeared.
The wall reflection is without doubt quite loud but it is
no longer clearly heard as an echo. This reflection follows
the direct signal so close in time that our ear-brain system
fuses the two separate sounds into one single sound and we
now have realized the "sound fusion" effect. Those
reflections that shortly follow the direct signal will blend
into and become part of the direct signal itself. It is a
natural feature of the hearing process.
Listening In The Room
Next, we relocate our thought experiment into a more conventional
setting, your hifi listening room. The room has four walls,
a floor and a ceiling. Six reflecting surfaces means there
are six times the number of initial reflections than when
we listened with our back to the stone wall. After these first
six, early reflections pass by there develops a sequence of
reflections that rapidly become very complicated. This is
because each reflection rebounds across the room only to meet
another wall and be reflected again, then again and again.
If the room is big, the reflections are sufficiently time
delayed so that we hear the echo of the room. This echo is
often not one simple echo but many echoes arriving in a confused
manner, randomly scattered over time. If the room is small,
the reflections are not time delayed sufficiently for us to
hear the room as a separate echo. We do hear small room reflections
quite loudly, we just do not recognize the reflections as
a separate sound. It is only because we do not consciously
recognize the reflections in the small room as a distinct
acoustic signal that we tend to forget that they compose the
majority of the sound we hear. The speaker is the last component
in the audio chain and the room acoustic is the last interconnect.
Distortions in any of the interconnects, including the last
one will degrade the quality of the audio signal.
The Acoustic Interconnect
Long time delay reflections, echoes are very bad for good
listening. But what about the short time delay reflections,
those that belong to the listening room? In some ways they
are actually good for listening but in other ways they become
a hindrance. Because of sound fusion, the early reflections
add to the direct sound and make it seem louder than it actually
is. For conversational speaking this is a benefit. However,
in audio we don't actually need the help of room reflections
to make loud sound, we have the amplifier and speakers to
deliver sound power.
Most people do not own listening rooms large enough to have
an echo. We also do not own rooms that are completely without
reflections. Hifi listening rooms have many reflections, most
of which fall within the 1/20 second sound fusion period of
time. So we always hear the room right along with the speaker.
This is why the audio experts always say that the room is
part of the audio chain. The Room Acoustic interconnect is
not only the last link in the audio chain. With the high quality
of today's audio electronic components and interconnects,
the Room Acoustic has certainly become the weakest link, and
because of sound fusion in small sized listening rooms, the
Room Acoustic is the most forgotten link in the audio chain.
Sometimes it is hard to remember that the room is an interconnect
because we are so used to interconnects as being cables with
plugs that we buy at the hifi shop and take home in a box.
The sound we hear is due to the combination of all the purchased
electronic components and electronic interconnects plus the
existing distortion and confusion from the last interconnect,
the room acoustic. Curiously, people in audio often upgrade
their electronic interconnects long before they even think
of improving their acoustic interconnect.
What can we expect from our room? It is simply no more than
one of the rooms that came with the house. It may even be
a nice room but it was never built to be a distortion free
wave guide for hi end audio signals, it was built for eating,
sleeping or visiting. Hi end audio needs something more than
a simple, contractor built room to be in control of the last
interconnect in an otherwise quality audio chain.
Stereo Perception
Although some reflections in the small listening room are
supportive to understanding spoken words, too many reflections,
for too long a period of time will confuse. Such is the sound
we hear when discussing furniture arrangements inside an empty
house or apartment, it is an echo problem. In hi end audio,
the echo can be a problem but in typical carpeted, furnished
rooms the problem is usually not an echo. Most small rooms
have too many early reflections within the sound fusion period
which degrades musical clarity and sound stage imaging. First,
we look into the process of acoustical imaging in audio.
To begin, let's return to the desert and listen to just one
speaker. We relax; stare ahead and begin to "see"
the sound coming from the speaker as we expect to occur. Next,
we turn up the sound from the second speaker. By the time
they are equally loud, the acoustic image floats between the
two speakers. This is exactly what stereo is really all about,
not two sounds from two separate speakers but the appearance
of one sound in the space between two speakers. The stereo
experience is intended to be an acoustic hologram, a mirage
of sound in the desert.
In the next experiment we again use one speaker and add a
wall located just to the side of the speaker. Now we receive
the direct signal from the speaker and very quickly following
is a reflection off the wall. The image of the speaker shifts
again away from the speaker and floats somewhere between the
speaker and the wall. The wall reflection produces a sound
not exactly like a second speaker yet similar effects are
observed. The wall reflection is weaker and slightly time
delayed compared to the signal from the speaker. This is quite
different from the previous stereo speaker experiment in which
the two signals arrived at the same time and with the same
intensity.
This entire imaging process has been greatly studied and
is called the "Haas effect", after a scientist of
that name. Signals as low as 10 dB below the direct signal
and as time delayed as much as 10 milliseconds will produce
image position changes. Clearly, with sound traveling 1,130
ft/second (334 m/sec), the wall reflections in the typical
sized listening room fall well within the Haas effect time
window.
When we get the same signal from the two separate locations
and within a very short period of time, our brain is tricked
into thinking that sound came from a spot between those two
locations, that can even be in front of or behind them. These
signals create a "virtual" sound source location.
If we get 3 such signals then the image is localized amongst
the 3 directions. But if we get many signals of different
strengths and delays and from different directions - we lose
track of where the sound seems to come from. We think the
sound comes from everywhere which is the same as nowhere.
Too many early reflections cause confusion in stereo imaging.
The sound stage is no longer crystal clear, it becomes fogged
over, detail is lost, image is blurred and sound depth becomes
flat.
We recognize this problem to exist whenever the speakers
do not "disappear". In a good room, the speakers
actually seem to be silent most of the time, all while and
throughout the front of the room a vivid audio stage show
is taking place.
Musical Quality
Small room acoustic reflections appear in two, and very different
forms. Not only form but their effects are also different.
Imagine the piano keyboard and middle C - 256 Hz. All notes
to the left of center are in the BASS cleft and those to the
right are TREBLE. Room reflections occur for all of the frequency
range. Those reflections that cause problems with imaging
belong for the most part to the treble cleft, above middle
C. Reflection in the bass range creates problems not so much
for imaging but effect the clarity, musical honesty and realism.
Unlike treble, reflections in the bass range do not bounce
around the room like balls. Their wavelengths are so long
that the reflected waves fold back one onto another. The resulting
compositions are generally known as room resonances or room
modes.
Room resonances will cause one note to sound loud and the
next to sound quiet. They also cause attack transients to
pick up a coloration in tone. Speakers project the treble
forward, directly into the room. If you step behind the speaker
the treble is no longer heard coming from the speaker. Not
so with the bass range. The wavelengths are larger than the
speaker and the sound expands evenly in all directions. You
hear bass as loudly behind the speaker as in front of the
speaker. The treble is beamed forward but the bass cannot
be beamed. We actually have to put 10 times more bass power
into the room than treble to get the same direct sound level
to the listener. This is partially due to acoustic efficiency
of speakers in the bass range but primarily due to the direct
bass wave having to be delivered to the whole room. The treble
is more efficiently produced and directed primarily towards
the listener.
There are two types of resonance reflection problems. The
sound that the speakers make first expands outward and contacts
the walls, floor and ceiling in the front of the room. These
very early reflections fold back upon one another to create
"head end ringing". The quivering of the air in
the front of the room occurs very quickly within 1/10 second
and so it colors the attack transients. It is only during
the attack transients of music can we identify phase and time
alignment. This most important quality in modern hi end audio
equipment is heavily degraded by head end ringing in the mid
bass range.
The second type of resonance takes much longer to develop,
typically 1/4 second. It engages the full length of the room
and tends to belong to the lower notes, the deep bass. These
are the full 3 dimensional room modes that are usually talked
about. They cause some notes to be excessively loud and others
too quiet. Room resonances cause the otherwise smooth frequency
response curve of even the very best audio equipment to become
very irregular at the listening position.
Room Acoustic Upgrade
Reflections do need control in the audio listening room.
Treble reflections are the most commonly understood. Carpet,
drapery and furniture work reasonably well with treble. The
typical products such as acoustical foam and fiberglass wall
panels are only for upper treble acoustics. It takes about
4 inches or 10 cm of such material to effect the full treble
range. One must be very careful about over damping the brightness
of the listening room by excessive misuse of low cost treble
absorptive materials. Some of the more recent audio quality,
treble range acoustic products are not only full treble bandwidth
but have built-in sound scattering panels to keep the listening
area controlled yet still sounding bright.
The lower half of the musical scale, the bass range, needs
BASS TRAPS. For many years bass traps were only found built
into the walls of recording studios. But over the last decade
acoustic products available in audio have been expanded to
include small, efficient, free standing bass traps. Sound
absorption depends on two factors, surface area and its absorption
coefficient or efficiency. Modern bass traps are cylinder
shaped in order to provide a large surface area as well as
high efficiency in a small package.
One very fortunate aspect of bass in small rooms is that
the corners of the room act like sound collectors, megaphones
in reverse. Because bass goes backwards as well as forwards,
it should be no surprise that bass traps are regularly found
both behind the speakers and behind the listener. Bass is
always extra loud in the corners of a room. That is why it
is such a good idea to locate bass traps in the corners of
the room. You can always recognize a properly set up a listening
room by the presence of corner loaded bass traps in every
corner of the room.
And so, now we should know a little more why the ROOM ACOUSTIC
is called the last link in the audio chain and even more,
what kinds of modern acoustic upgrades are to be expected
in this last and all too often forgotten link of the hi end
audio chain.