K
KingstonRock
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I read about this in a car audio installation article and saw it mentioned in a thread here. It's not really a studio building question. More of an acoustics one.
The article talked about how a subwoofer box should be aimed facing the rear of the car because low frequency waves can be as long as 40 ft from crest to crest and take room to develop. Having the woofers fire backwards would mean that the waves had to hit the trunk, reflect, than travel to your ears. At the time I read it I decided it was valid. But when I saw it mentioned here, I realized that no matter where you are, you ears can only be at one point in a sound wave, its the oscillation of the wave that allows you to here it.
I only ask because I'm wondering if I am wrong and sitting only 2 feet from my monitors I am losing low frequencies, I dont think I am, but I have really no basis for comparison.
I'm thinking that maybe the car audio guy is trying to create standing waves to increase the bass, but there's no way to ensure that your creating frequency doubling at any of the various listening postitions in a car, and not totally doubled waves would just screw up the bass and you certainly wouldnt want cancellation. PLus I doubt that a car provides enough refelction for standing waves to occur. That's another thing. A trunk is not a very refelctive surface. But at the same time, there are waves coming off both the front and back surface of the driver. Though the waves coming of the rear of the cone may be lessened by the fact that the rear of the cone is in a box. All installations I've seen done have the woofers firing outward, i guess it just looks cool.
But the guy who wrote the article was a fairly well respected car audio guy if i remember, whatever that means, an audiophile with a garage?
Eric
The article talked about how a subwoofer box should be aimed facing the rear of the car because low frequency waves can be as long as 40 ft from crest to crest and take room to develop. Having the woofers fire backwards would mean that the waves had to hit the trunk, reflect, than travel to your ears. At the time I read it I decided it was valid. But when I saw it mentioned here, I realized that no matter where you are, you ears can only be at one point in a sound wave, its the oscillation of the wave that allows you to here it.
I only ask because I'm wondering if I am wrong and sitting only 2 feet from my monitors I am losing low frequencies, I dont think I am, but I have really no basis for comparison.
I'm thinking that maybe the car audio guy is trying to create standing waves to increase the bass, but there's no way to ensure that your creating frequency doubling at any of the various listening postitions in a car, and not totally doubled waves would just screw up the bass and you certainly wouldnt want cancellation. PLus I doubt that a car provides enough refelction for standing waves to occur. That's another thing. A trunk is not a very refelctive surface. But at the same time, there are waves coming off both the front and back surface of the driver. Though the waves coming of the rear of the cone may be lessened by the fact that the rear of the cone is in a box. All installations I've seen done have the woofers firing outward, i guess it just looks cool.
But the guy who wrote the article was a fairly well respected car audio guy if i remember, whatever that means, an audiophile with a garage?
Eric