Browse Forums Home Theatre & Automation Re: Home theatre room - does it need a door for better sound? 10Jun 18, 2008 1:54 pm vanderlay mikkyG Most of the display homes that have serious HT rooms have the opening behind the seats and I cant remember seeing any doors on those rooms... or windows for that matter. I dont think what they normally have in display homes are "serious" HT rooms!! You really need to control the light coming in and the sound going out....or you wont see your screen well, and will drive everyone else in the place bonkers! Vanders you took the words right out of my mouth. A 'serious' HT room would definitely have the ability to completely close it off form the rest of the house. You have more control over the light coming in, you reduce the amount of noise going out and the amount of background noise coming in (which will actually make the sound in the room seem clearer and louder). That said, I'm sure there are plenty of very cool and practical HT rooms that have an open door or completely open end, but there is still a difference. As far as genuinely improving the acoustics inside the room - consider all of the surfaces. Many big, open, flat, hard surfaces will hurt the quality of the sound in the room, so in a sense putting doors in will only add to that, but the gains mentioned above are more important than this smaller negative. Tame as many of the other surfaces as you can (P.S. people building 'serious' HT rooms with timber floors need to think again....) - carpet, curtains, plush furniture - these all help. As far as the door acting like a bass reflex port??? A. Impossible - bass reflex ports are of an exact tuned length/size to accentuate certain frequencies produced behind the driver in the subwoofer enclosure, to improve or enhance the sub's output in those frequency areas. B. If it was possible the improvement would be heard/felt by people outside the room/port... Put the door in to control the ambient light and background noise, and to be kinder to the people in the rest of the house. That's exactly what my double-cavity-sliders are for. Re: Home theatre room - does it need a door for better sound? 11Jun 18, 2008 1:56 pm vanderlay mikkyG Most of the display homes that have serious HT rooms have the opening behind the seats and I cant remember seeing any doors on those rooms... or windows for that matter. I dont think what they normally have in display homes are "serious" HT rooms!! You really need to control the light coming in and the sound going out....or you wont see your screen well, and will drive everyone else in the place bonkers! Yeah most are pretty average at best, there are a few builders in Canberra we looked at for ideas and they defiantly have serious setups. The buggers generally have a staff member and a chain to stop you going in an nicking off with their gear and for that you get the privilege of hearing the new transformers movie coursing through 'every room' of the house while you are trying to have a conversation with the sales assistant But if anyone in Canberra is looking for ideas I'd suggest heading out to Forde display village I think the builders are secretly having a sound/theater off Bigger the better for storage for me IMO. But I guess it's harder to tell the cost/benefit in your example - mainly the 'cost'? If you go 700mm, what are you doing extra… 2 3064 Hi We have a road close to our place and only an old flimsy wooden fence between us and the Neighbour closest to the road. Any ideas on a sound proof modular fence. Like… 0 7787 Grate, thank you! RexChan if thats the reason i could sleep well without thinking about additional cost. But 1st i'll need to read about NRV cleaning/replaing stuff. I… 7 31929 |