Hello again
Yes, you are right Peter, it’s correct that also the direct sound played from an instrument in a distance of 20m has a delay of around 66ms.
Yes, you are right Peter the delay-time of the very first reflected indirect sound from an instrument played in a distance of 20m is not (only)66ms.
Yes, it looks like the only truth what I’ve written. So I adapted the answer to PolarBear in a more common version. I hope you can agree in this way.
Peter and Dietz thank you for correcting me.
Here some more additions.
How big we feel a room depends on the delay of the very first reflections in relation to the direct sounds we hear. That’s a common fact we can read in every acoustic-book.
Supposed you take a room 20x20m, the shortest possible way for an indirect sound-signal from the instrument to a listener is around 28m (2x 14m).
The difference to 20m is in this case 8m.
http://homepage.hispeed.ch/beat.kaufmann/Reflections.jpg">
That would mean a delay of ~26ms. But there are others of those delayed reflections. After 50ms, 70ms, 80ms… All these reflections reach the listener. In the end he will recognice thousands of them. The summary of all these following reflections we call
reverb. Maybe an average predelay of 50ms – 70ms for the very first reflections in this room and the showed situation is a good value.
Supposed you take the same room 20x20m, but with a sound-sorce distance of 10m, the shortest possible way for an indirect sound-signal from the instrument to the listener is around 24m (2x 12m). The difference to 10m is in this case 14m. Peter is absolutely right when we spoke about the very first r e f l e c t i o
n (singular):
That would mean a delay of ~46ms. I believe
the difference to the upper example is, that lots of the next very first reflections have a delay near 46 ms too. So an average for this very first reflections will not be as high as in the upper example...???
...Peter, if your vote tells us the full truth we have to say:
The near an instrument in a room the more delay of the indirect signal you have ?? My meaning is that the instrument sounds allways near but the roomsize seems to increase??
Please forgive me to be so provocative. [[[;)]]]
The story of reflections and reverbs is very very complex. This might be the reason too, that such a lot of reverbs and reverb-concepts are on the market. With SIR we have 2 - 3 knobs... and
there were guys who wanted help, not irritation
The question was:
“How to position instruments in a room?”The following summary could be useful:
Dietz: Use predelays for a dedicated reverb if you want to put a certain instrument in front (or behind?) of others.
Evan: (summarized)
Use near sampled impulses for instruments which should be placed and played near you and vice versa. In other words: Use the impulses as the were recorded. Additional note: I recommend using the dry direct-signal as well. The effect of depth only works properly in combination with this direct-signal.
Peter:Read his interesting explanations about mics, stages, delays and recordings for having more background.
Beat:Take your ears, your reverb, different impulses, different predelays, EQs, time and have ago. In the end our ears together with our brain generate a room-impression. And only this impression counts - not the technical facts.
All the best
Beat
Peter and Dietz > Please believe me I DON'T WANT A "SPACE"-WAR! [[[;)]]]