@Nick Batzdorf said:
Oh, of course. Yes, you already have the ERs on the samples.
I wasn't thinking.
I'm not talking about the early reflections - they are crucial for the signature of the room and the instrument's behaviour in it, as well as the positioning cues.
If you analyze a typical IR you will most likely see a short amount of silence (reflecting the distance from the impulse to the microphone), then a razor-sharp spike (the dry signal, which can be extremely low in volume, of course), follwed by another short amount of silence. Only after this initial phase of the IR the actual reflection-part begins, most likely with the ERs from the floor at the very beginning, only fractions of a second after the remaining dry spike. About 100 to 300 ms later you already have the dense reverb tail, which carries only little positioning or disctance cues any more and sounds pretty similar from many source-positions in good music-facilities.
So you wouldn't want to lose the ERs, but only the first few milliseconds. Another way to achieve this is to keep the intrinsic timing (IOW no cutting at all), but to silence the remaining dry part within the IR-audiofile.
All these aspects will be considered and integrated in the MIR-engine when it comes to maximise flexibilty on the one hand, and performance on the other.