
CoolCat
Well-known member
so as I understand it, please correct me if I'm wrong, but the 90db is where the freqs reach the equal volume point or "flat".
but in a crap room, HR, this loud volume creates the nulls, nodes, dips and mountains of adding and subtracting freqs... ass sound, in short.
So which would be better to lower the volume, to reduce the "room effect" or keep the 90db ??
Why would that be bad, from a mathematical standpoint, the ratio of "sound bouncing" would be reduced if the volume was lowered, in turn actually making the "sound" closer to flat than at the 90db level?
but in a crap room, HR, this loud volume creates the nulls, nodes, dips and mountains of adding and subtracting freqs... ass sound, in short.
So which would be better to lower the volume, to reduce the "room effect" or keep the 90db ??
Why would that be bad, from a mathematical standpoint, the ratio of "sound bouncing" would be reduced if the volume was lowered, in turn actually making the "sound" closer to flat than at the 90db level?