Well known by anymore who has experience in the field.
So you think what works in a studio works in a home environment. Do you live in a studio? I don't!
I live in a purpose built room for MY visual and listening pleasure. I posted two pairs of my speaker
in "Most beautiful speakers." Hand crafted and hand built.
What I did for a living is a lot more complex than any music room ever built. I assure YOU of that. BUT
I did fix or build most of the equipment that it takes to build a music room, if that makes you feel better
about using that equipment to make YOUR living. LOL
I made the equipment and you used the equipment, who are you Tom Cruz in "Wheels of Thunder?"
90% of the engineers I worked with SELDOM locked horns with the mechanic, I assure you, that is where
I started, not ended.
No one wants a listening room to sound anything like a studio. Ken Bassett a wonderful musician, technician,
song writer, and mixing artist has a mixing room and playback room. They are not the same or even close.
BTW he built kidney dialysis machines for the first company to introduce, peritoneal dialysis to the world.
Very prestigious credentials considering most of the instruments he plays he built with the exception to his
prize Martins.
I'm alway most impressed by those that DO for a living not measure mine, by a standard that is 75%
personally subjective along with mixing music. Music is 100% subjective or the tune of the day might
be cannon vollies timed correctly and vocals by Yoko Ono. Someone recorded that shit! Yes, No!
My point is simple, don't bad mouth what is working for almost everybody listening to music. No one cares
about 100, 50 or 25% absorption in the real world of listening. How does it sound after it's done is the
question for me. Drapes don't work and carpets don't help, sure they don't. I just saw a pig fly too.
I'll withhold my regards if you don't mind.