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knightfly said:I'd need quite a bit more info before suggesting what changes should be made - like is that drum area just a riser, if so how's it made, is the wall (the one behind the drums) that's 90 degrees to the control room window also as reflective as the window, do you use a stereo pair of overheads as part of the drum micing setup, what is the bunch of squiggly lines on the right side wall, what materials are floor and ceiling made of, but most of all what don't you like about your setup/sound as it is now?
Acoustics are tricky enough when you're in the room - long distance, they are even more difficult; so, any and all info you have about the existing setup and results would help... Steve
knightfly said:Your description, "it just sounds like crap." could apply to almost anything - just to get things more pinned down, I'm gonna make a wild guess here, see if I'm close at all: When you pull your mics back, your drums/cymbals lose any "shimmer" they had, and drums sound like you maybe put a medium-weight blanket over them. I'll go one more; group acapella vocals, if they work at all, need a fair amount of treble boost to have any "air" to them.
knightfly said:
Is that anywhere in the ballpark? I made a couple assumptions about the rest of the room's treatment, so I'm not sure on anything yet.
Your actual modal distribution, using dim's of 38,33, and 13 feet, looks pretty good down to 30 hZ - below that there's a slight dip but most speakers wouldn't even reproduce it, and you definitely wouldn't hear it with what I'm seeing on the bridge. Are you using a sub with your nearfields, or am I missing something? Your site doesn't even mention a monitoring system, so I'm not sure what you're using.
knightfly said:
Is your drum riser filled with insulation, or hollow between the framing?
knightfly said:
If you can fill in the blanks including what's on the rest of the walls in the tracking room, and let me know if I'm close to what your perceived problem is... Steve
Oh, just in case you're not already doing so, be sure and keep your mics away from heights that are either half of your REAL ceiling height, or half of your LOWERED ceiling height by at least 4-6" - that can cause several nulls in response too...
Pahtcub said:You have a chess board in the control room??? FREAKING SWEET!!!!!
Pat