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Flown Subs, Ground Bounce, and People in 1/2 space
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<blockquote data-quote="Brad Weber" data-source="post: 25016" data-attributes="member: 114"><p>Re: Flown Subs, Ground Bounce, and People in 1/2 space</p><p></p><p>I think that people often seem to approach the effects of the floor the subs and the effects of the floor on the listeners as two separate events when they are actually addressing he same thing as the floor is a shared boundary.</p><p></p><p>To really mess up those that argue about losing level with flown subs, consider flying the subs very near the ceiling. Now the 'loading' boundary for the sub and the boundary affecting the listeners are two different boundaries and the effects can superimpose, resulting an in increase versus gorund stacked subs. However, a common issue with flown subs indoors is not paying attention to the relationship to the ceiling and surrounding surfaces, resulting in cancellation toward the listeners at relevant frequencies.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brad Weber, post: 25016, member: 114"] Re: Flown Subs, Ground Bounce, and People in 1/2 space I think that people often seem to approach the effects of the floor the subs and the effects of the floor on the listeners as two separate events when they are actually addressing he same thing as the floor is a shared boundary. To really mess up those that argue about losing level with flown subs, consider flying the subs very near the ceiling. Now the 'loading' boundary for the sub and the boundary affecting the listeners are two different boundaries and the effects can superimpose, resulting an in increase versus gorund stacked subs. However, a common issue with flown subs indoors is not paying attention to the relationship to the ceiling and surrounding surfaces, resulting in cancellation toward the listeners at relevant frequencies. [/QUOTE]
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