Remembering,
Andre
It is discussed in slightly more detail in section 6.2.3. The discussion in this thread is about low end effects. In the RD Report the increase is in the high end around 1.6 kHz and up.Ethan Winer wrote:If you mean Figure 1 showing more reverb after adding ceiling tiles, isn't that likely due to the same run-to-run variation we're talking about here?
I don't think it had anything to do with repeatability. When you add absorption to the ceiling and floor of a room, the reverberation times (T60s) tend to look wonderful on paper, but test very poorly. This is because of the pronounced artifacts that you get - mostly of the flutter echo variety. My guess - and it's only a guess - would be that the test mic(s) in the room picked up increased T60s from flutter anomalies. These would have otherwise been "buried in the noise" for the test without carpet. When a flutter echo, which tends to have a higher decay time than that of suitably diffuse reverberant field, is detected, suddenly the T60s would appear to increase. But what's being measured is no longer a T60 in the technical sense.AVare wrote:If it was lack of repeatability, I am certain that Fletcher would have determined that and not reported what he did.