Placement and Room Acoustics Interaction
Placement and Room Acoustics Interaction
8
1
Placement and Room Acoustics
Interaction
Multichannel audio production still has many challenges to face up to. We are
constantly updated on the equipment involved and enlightened with
techniques and aesthetics, but the various technical and practical issues that
need to be considered before starting a multichannel recording or mix are less
well addressed. Genelecs Christophe Anet presents some technical and
practical issues for a multichannel control room.
To gather the right equipment in an acoustically decent control room is only part of the
multichannel challenge. The issues that I will present here do not consider equipment
choices or production techniques, but highlight the speaker placement in relation to
boundaries, furniture design and layout, calibration of sound sources and room acoustics.
Equipment and Layout
Most of todays multichannel control rooms are not originally designed for multichannel
production. Also equipment layout and installations vary significantly from one room to the
next. The physical location of the equipment in the room has direct consequences on the
quality of the reproduced audio and inevitably on the final production.
First, the general rule that the control room layout should be symmetrical is still valid. With
the quantity of additional equipment, their symmetrical positioning is even more crucial.
Figure 1: Non-symmetrical equipment layout leading
to compromised sound field.
Figure 2: Example of a symmetrical
equipment layout for a multichannel control
room.
Genelec Oy, 2003. Published in Resolution Magazine, Sweet Spot, pp 54-55, Nov/Dec 2003, Volume V2.8
2
As the largest and heaviest piece of equipment in the control room is of course the mixing
console, its location along the middle axis of the room is highly important. All other pieces of
furniture added around and behind the console should also be spread in a symmetrical
manner.
Early reflections, with high amplitude in relation to the direct sound, can smear the coherence
of the spatial information and compromise sound source localisation. To avoid this, all
reflecting surfaces (19 outboard racks, keyboard racks, computer tables, etc) placed
between the speakers and the listening position should be removed, or at least minimised
(see Figure 1 & 2). Furthermore, tables or outboard racks placed inside the speaker circle
should be lower than the typical mixing console control surface height. With DAWs, the
insertion of large screens into the work surface reduce significantly first order reflections from
the centre speaker. Making the tabletops from non-reflecting material such as perforated
steel would reduce the reflections further. However small the remaining surfaces can be,
reflections in the time domain should be identical from both the left and right half of the room.
Furniture could be designed so that there are no additional surfaces beyond the job needs. If
each speaker faces a direct path with different reflection patterns, it will be quite impossible
to measure five identical responses at the mix position. Even with proper symmetry,
everything possible should be done to remove the reflecting surfaces, especially those close
to each speaker.
For the placement of the listening position in the room, most research works indicate that the
reference point should be located in the front half of the room, so that the engineer gets the
best direct-to-reverberant signal ratio in listening. However, as there are now rear speakers
involved as well, the acoustic design of the front half of the room becomes more complicated.
If the room has, for example, hard and reflective front wall surfaces, direct sound from the
rear left speaker will bounce on the front right speaker and nearby boundaries. This situation
should be avoided as these strong first reflections will alter the front speakers direct sound.
This calls for some planning in room geometry and location of absorptive surfaces in the mid
and high frequency band.
Recommended Speaker Placement
The widely accepted professional standard is the ITUR BS.7751. The recommendation
states clearly a few well-known points: the positioning of the reference listening point is at the
centre of an imaginary circle having a radius between 2 m and 4 m (min. and max. radius
defined in the ITU-R BS.11161 recommendation).
Concerning positioning angles, in the horizontal plane, there should be 60 degrees between
front left and right speakers, with the centre speaker in the middle. Both rear speakers should
be placed within 100 to 120 degrees from the centre line. If more than two rear speakers are
used, they should be symmetrically placed between 60 and 150 degrees from the centre line.
The acoustical axis of the front speakers as defined by the speakers manufacturer - should
be approximately at the listeners ear height, meaning 1.2 m for the ITU. The height of the
rear speakers is less critical and an inclination of up to 15 degrees is accepted.
Many layout variations are possible within the ITU recommendations. Despite the fact that
most recording engineers choose the 110 degrees for the rear speakers, there are differing
views about these angles. Depending on the source material and the type of surround effects
desired, the surround channels location becomes an open issue. The general practical goal,
however, should be to follow these recommendations to achieve compatibility in the overall
production chain.
Genelec Oy, 2003. Published in Resolution Magazine, Sweet Spot, pp 54-55, Nov/Dec 2003, Volume V2.8
3
Since all sources are placed on a circle, the speakers have to be precisely positioned to
avoid amplitude and signal arrival delays (as an example, if an audio element is panned from
centre to left, and the centre monitor is offset forwards or backwards by 25 mm (1), one can
expect amplitude ripples in the 500 Hz region due to arrival time delays). The ITU also allows
positioning the centre speaker along a straight line between left and right speakers, but then
a time delay is needed to retrieve equal arrival times.
The rear speakers often have to be placed higher than ear level, but not beyond 15 degrees
of inclination; otherwise coherence of the front-back image and of the surround field is lost. In
many cases the elevation of the rear speakers is an elegant solution that frees the floor
space.
Once the array is in place, the speakers must be pointed towards the engineers listening
position to obtain the optimal on-axis reproduction. Even if the reference listening area with a
standard 5.1 speakers arrangement might be slightly larger than with a stereophonic
arrangement, it is crucial that each speaker is orientated properly. If large reflective surfaces
cannot be removed, the five main speakers could be placed slightly higher than listening
level on separate stands, all at the same height, and then slightly tilted down towards the
listening position.
The brain has much higher capability to localise information in the horizontal than vertical
plane - our ears location explain that fact very easily. The ear/brain vertical localisation
resolution is about 3 degrees above ear level horizon and 3 to 10 degrees below that line.
Hence our vertical localisation tolerance is roughly 7 degrees in the normal vertical working
window, and there two sources can be positioned at different heights without the ear/brain
noticing the difference. This useful human hearing tolerance can be exploited when placing
the centre speaker. Also, with a non-acoustically transparent screen, the better position for
the centre speaker is above the screen and not below as some paper suggest the ITU
included. Placing the centre speaker below the screen means the speaker cabinet is closer
to the floor and floor reflections will strongly colour the critical midrange band. Above the
screen the centre speaker might suffer from low ceiling reflections but applying effective, i.e.
reasonably thick, damping materials in the ceiling is easier than on the floor. A thin carpet
does not help.
Speakers and Boundary Interferences
Probably the majority of the audible problems in monitoring are due to the effects of the room
acoustics. A large majority of multichannel rooms use a combination of
speakers/subwoofer/bass management system to reproduce the 6 discrete channels. With
that set-up the bass management will direct the low frequencies of each main channel and
most of the LFE channel to the subwoofer.
To determine the practical correct location for the subwoofer and the main speakers, lets
assume a crossover frequency of 85Hz between them. Since all speakers and subwoofers
are omni-directional at low frequencies, cancellation effects, standing waves in the room and
the proximity of boundaries will affect the speakers/subwoofer performance.
When a speaker having flat anechoic (4) response is placed against one solid boundary -
which is large compared to the wavelength - the radiation space becomes 2, and the
theoretical amplitude gain is 6 dB for frequencies below a few hundred Hz. This applies
typically to flush mounted speakers or speakers placed with their back against a wall. In all
cases, this amplitude change has to be compensated to retrieve a flat and neutral frequency
balance.
Genelec Oy, 2003. Published in Resolution Magazine, Sweet Spot, pp 54-55, Nov/Dec 2003, Volume V2.8
4
Typical subwoofer location is on the floor and against a wall. Here are two large boundaries
(radiation space ), which cause a +12 dB amplitude gain compared to free field. This gain is
beneficial, as it provides additional headroom and/or less distortion.
Dual subwoofers are suggested for certain multichannel formats and most of such
installations place the subwoofers in the control room front corners. The radiation space is
further halved and the amplitude gain becomes then +18 dB for each subwoofer.
Adjustments of such systems can become difficult due to the strong excitation of room
modes from the corners. A fully symmetrical subwoofer placement is then less
recommended, as a slight layout asymmetry can minimize the room modes excitation.
Another boundary interference to consider is the so called back wall cancellation effect,
generated by the single reflection from the wall behind the speaker. When two identical
signals are in anti-phase, they cancel each other. If the speaker is a quarter wavelength
away from a reflective wall, the reflected wave comes back to the speaker with half a cycle
phase difference and thus cancels the original signal at that frequency. The importance of
the cancellation depends on the distance and the reflection coefficient of the wall, but it is
usually well audible.
For a multichannel set-up using an 85 Hz crossover between speaker and subwoofer here is
a set of practical placement solutions:
First, the distance between the radiating subwoofer driver and the wall providing part of the
low frequency loading must not exceed a conservative 90 cm. If the subwoofer is placed
further than 90 cm, cancellation and comb filtering will start to occur below 85 Hz, degrading
the subwoofer response.
Secondly, there are three practical alternatives for the main speakers reproducing the
remaining frequency range above 85 Hz:
First, the speakers are flush mounted in a hard wall (or infinite baffle) eliminating the
rear wall reflection problem. With two-way speakers this option is rarely implemented, but
is almost inevitable with large full-band speakers.
Figure 3: ITU R BS.775-1 speaker placement
with each main speaker placed against a wall.
(hemispherical loading)
Figure 4: ITU R BS.775-1 speaker placement
with each main speaker placed at least 1.1m
from the wall behind.
L R
C
30
0
RS LS
110
0
Sub
L R
C
30
0
RS LS
110
0
Sub
Genelec Oy, 2003. Published in Resolution Magazine, Sweet Spot, pp 54-55, Nov/Dec 2003, Volume V2.8
5
Second best is placing the speaker very close to the wall, which raises the cancellation
frequency. However, with very small speakers, inherently less directional in mid
frequencies, the dip just moves to the low mid-band and might cause even worse
coloration. Nevertheless, in most cases distances between 0 and 20 cm between the
front radiating driver and the wall behind can be considered as safe (the directivity of the
speaker should be high enough so that the rear radiation cannot cause a severe
cancellation).
The third logical cure is to move the speaker away from the wall, and in our example
case it is at least over 1.1 m. In doing so, the cancellation frequency goes down below
the 85 Hz cut-off of each main speaker. In the meantime, of course, distances to other
room boundaries become smaller and reflections from these other surfaces might start to
dominate the response. This third placement solution is the most common layout for
multichannel control rooms that are not equipped with large flush mounted speaker
systems.
The acoustical adjustment of the interaction between speakers and room is highly important
before doing any kind of level calibration, so that the frequency response of the whole
system is consistent across the entire spectrum without cancellation dips.
Most of the above practical suggestions require some common sense and some advanced
planning. A well laid out control room is a necessary starting point for any multichannel
production.