Small HT room...Possible?

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • syzygylock
    Member
    • Sep 2007
    • 49

    Small HT room...Possible?

    Hi all, I have a small room (10' x 10') that I want to turn into a small HT. I wanted to put in a 50" Pioneer Kuro and DIY speakers for a 5.1 setup. I want to post here for comments and advices for what I can do to get the best out of this small space I got.

    Thanks,
  • dyazdani
    Moderator Emeritus
    • Oct 2005
    • 7032

    #2
    I also have a smallish room, I think it is around 13' square. I've got a front projector and rather large speakers in there and don't really have an issue with it. It's not optimum, but you can still have an enjoyable room out of it.

    I would say that you'll want to look into some acoustical treatments and seating arrangements that maximize the space, i.e. along the back wall.
    Danish

    Comment

    • syzygylock
      Member
      • Sep 2007
      • 49

      #3
      Sounds good, as I only wanted to make my own set of speakers. Anyone has any recommendations on what DIY speakers that would fit for a small HT? The popular MTWM in our forum seems too big. Is there any other choices?

      Comment

      • Ovation
        Super Senior Member
        • Sep 2004
        • 2202

        #4
        I have mine in a room that is 11 x 15 and it includes a projector, a 64 inch screen, some sizable speakers (on stands, but that takes as much space as a floorstander). It's tight, but when the lights are out, no one cares. So yes, it's doable, but it requires some planning. Acoustic treatments are recommended (I have some, along with a parametric EQ for my sub) and I also recommend (either store-bought or DIY) a speaker that works well as a near-field monitor. It doesn't have to be the stated design goal of the speaker, but there are many excellent sounding speakers that require a lot of "breathing space"--which they won't get in that size space. Something to keep in mind when auditioning or designing speakers.

        Comment

        • David Meek
          Moderator Emeritus
          • Aug 2000
          • 8938

          #5
          The theater room in our old house was 11'-3" x 13'-3", with large floor-standing speakers, so yes you can make it work. I admit I cheated some by recessing the equipment rack into the wall (along with the "big box" RPTV which should work out the same as if you had a flat-screen on the wall). If you'd like some arrangement ideas, here's a link to an old thread that shows it in an almost-complete state.

          I hope this helps.
          .

          David - Trigger-happy HTGuide Admin

          Comment

          • Chris D
            Moderator Emeritus
            • Dec 2000
            • 16877

            #6
            Oooh, the first thing that pops into my mind, in addition to, "That's small", is, "That's square". I think you're going to get some pretty severe reverberations, standing waves, and nulls in a room like that. Sorry!
            CHRIS

            Well, we're safe for now. Thank goodness we're in a bowling alley.
            - Pleasantville

            Comment

            • syzygylock
              Member
              • Sep 2007
              • 49

              #7
              Can you point me to a place to read up on the reverberations, standing waves, and nulls? Is there a way to solve it? How rectangular does a room needs to be "good"?

              Comment

              • syzygylock
                Member
                • Sep 2007
                • 49

                #8
                Wow David, that room looks pretty neat. Do you also notice the problem that Chris mentioned?

                Comment

                • dyazdani
                  Moderator Emeritus
                  • Oct 2005
                  • 7032

                  #9
                  Originally posted by syzygylock
                  Can you point me to a place to read up on the reverberations, standing waves, and nulls? Is there a way to solve it? How rectangular does a room needs to be "good"?
                  You can help the acoustics with the treatments as well as with an EQ on the sub. I've only treated my room and it doesn't seem too bad (mine is also pretty much square).

                  There is a book, Master Handbook of Acoustics that is good for learning. You can also read online, try this link for starters.
                  Danish

                  Comment

                  • David Meek
                    Moderator Emeritus
                    • Aug 2000
                    • 8938

                    #10
                    Originally posted by syzygylock
                    Wow David, that room looks pretty neat. Do you also notice the problem that Chris mentioned?
                    Yes, I'd had a fairly arduous period trying to get the sound "up to par" in that room before I began remodeling it. I'd spent days with the arrangement on the short walls, moving the speakers, changing toe-in, moving the chair (singular for testing). I tried modeling the room using a program called CARA and wasn't making much headway, until I tried the setup oriented on the long walls and things looked better on paper. I changed the setup in the room and it did sound much better. After that it was only a matter of completing the remod and tweaking the speaker locations.

                    Some other things that helped were hanging curtains on the wall behind the chairs, keeping the heavy carpet and adding some decorations on the walls to act as diffusers. Even though it was my HT room, I was trying to keep it from looking too cluttered so I didn't go with engineered wall treatments or anything of that nature.

                    Originally posted by syzygylock
                    How rectangular does a room needs to be "good"?
                    There are several ratios of room length to width to height that are called the "golden ratios" due to their lessening of room modes, peaks, nulls. I'll see if I can find them....

                    Okay, I found one in the files which is .618 x 1.000 x 1.618 with the measurements taken from the finished wall surface. For example if your room is 10' wide, it would need to have a ceiling height of 6.18' and a length of 16.18'. Now, any reasonable set of sizes will do as long as they correspond to that ratio. There are some other suggested ratios, too....
                    .

                    David - Trigger-happy HTGuide Admin

                    Comment

                    • syzygylock
                      Member
                      • Sep 2007
                      • 49

                      #11
                      Thanks all for the reply, I have been busy trying to read up on all of these info. Would any of you have a recommendation for what DIY speakers that would fit this small room? or all of them are good? ... I look at all the designs in the forums but lack the experience to know what is really needed and what isn't.

                      Comment

                      • Chris D
                        Moderator Emeritus
                        • Dec 2000
                        • 16877

                        #12
                        syzygylock, one thing I'll say is that, rooms are NEVER perfect, and there's always compromises. Even the biggest and best of rooms isn't 100% ideal. So what I think it comes down to is if you'll be able to make any particular room good ENOUGH for your own personal standards, and then choose to be happy with the results! My two previous theaters have been quite different in size, performance, and treatments. I can/could have made either of them MUCH better. But in the end, I've been very happy using both of them.
                        CHRIS

                        Well, we're safe for now. Thank goodness we're in a bowling alley.
                        - Pleasantville

                        Comment

                        • Gremal
                          Senior Member
                          • Apr 2007
                          • 195

                          #13
                          I use a small room, too. I haven't remodeled, hidden the wires behind the walls or done anything to make it look as nice as David's room. But it's absolutely possible to put together a reference-level HT system in a small space.

                          Integrated 7.1 HT and Two-Channel System
                          Pioneer KRP-600M | VAC Phi Beta 110i | to be determined front end
                          B&W 802D | B&W HTM1D | B&W ASW-825 | B&W N805 | B&W SCM1
                          VPI Scout | Oppo BDP-95 | Tivo Series 3 | Integra DTC-9.8
                          Audio Refinement Multi-5 | PS Audio Premier | Goertz and Electra Glide cables

                          Comment

                          Working...
                          Searching...Please wait.
                          An unexpected error was returned: 'Your submission could not be processed because you have logged in since the previous page was loaded.

                          Please push the back button and reload the previous window.'
                          An unexpected error was returned: 'Your submission could not be processed because the token has expired.

                          Please push the back button and reload the previous window.'
                          An internal error has occurred and the module cannot be displayed.
                          There are no results that meet this criteria.
                          Search Result for "|||"