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@basstraps-blog
The Good is The Enemy of the Best.
Why You Need To Add Bass Traps To Your Studio
When you think of sound waves, pretend the space you're listening in contains four feet of standard tap water. Evaluate the dimensions of the area together with the furniture pieces. If you decide to move around you will create waves that are going to proceed across the space and rebound from the sides of the room and combine with brand new waves that haven’t arrived at the wall yet.
If you were to create massive waves that bounced back from the wall and returned back to you then you could crank out a brand new wave to increase the energy of the returning wave and build a new even bigger wave. In other words if you established an ideal wave making tempo the waves within the room would look totally different following the 10th repetition than after the first. Sound waves are similar. Each and every studio has modes. When you play an individual tone and pay attention to the tone at specific places inside of a room it easy to identify particular tones which sound very different in regards to volume levels. A number of positions may possibly be louder or quieter while others may be effectively muted. It becomes nearly impossible to figure out what's going on in a room if a track is playing and a lot of unique tones are being played all at once. Specific tones naturally overlap and as well as cancel one another out making a different experience beyond several areas in the room. Some of this simply cannot be avoided though it can easily be brought to an acceptable range with the use of bass traps. Bass traps are 3 dimensional structures that may be installed in a studio to transform audio waves into small amounts of heat. When employed correctly bass traps are able to reduce the negative impacts related to interference in a listening space and as a result help to keep the sound experience precise and unaffected. Now if you are the kind of individual that wants the highest sound quality possible you must start thinking about adding a few bass traps to the corners of the room including the bottom corners. The larger the bass trap the more effective it will be. Corners tend to be hot spots for sound wave activity and thus exceptional places for bass traps
. Don’t be mistaken by soundproofing. There is a significant difference between attempting to contain sound within the room and trying to create a room where the sound waves do not echo and bounce around after they are contained within a room. Using this method is normally called “tuning a room”. Tuning a room involves not only applying some form of studio foam to reduce the reverberations of higher pitch tones but also bass traps for lower pitch tones. Variations in bass tones are one of the most common roadblocks for home studio enthusiasts.
Commonly a room without bass traps can lead to mixes that sound incredibly good in the studio they were mixed in but completely different in different rooms. In summary, the next time you are sitting in your studio consider the reflective surfaces within the room. Bass traps and sound panels typically are not very pricey or difficult to construct and they're going to help make your studio sound excellent.