This design is absolute fire. Love the recessed sides and attention to detail. Great selection of speakers. The dark carpet really hides the transition in the floor. Very good for watching, but bad when mother in law breaks her hip on her way to the loo. ( or is it? )
Brother, perhaps your baffle wall construction is not complete, but...if not, what you currently have done is pretty much ineffective as a baffle wall. Do you have the "Procella System Design White Paper & Installation Handbook"? Three big things stand out as big problems: The speakers are nowhere near tightly-fitted in the baffle wall. To reduce spectral dips in the mid to low frequencies of the non-subwoofer speakers caused by back reflections, they must be a very tight fit in the baffle wall, and the wall itself must be seriously rigid. Secondly, those speakers must be flush with or slightly extended past the baffle wall or you will have refraction issues off the edge of the baffle wall opening. Thirdly, check to see if what you have used for absorption on the baffle wall is adequate. I don't think it is. All these factors, including proper absorption covering recommendations are included in Chapter 6: Baffle Wall Design and Construction (page 23). You've invested a lot of money on hardware. You will make a huge improvement on the performance of those speakers with proper baffle wall installation. Check it out. The Procella installation handbook is not just beneficial to Procella speakers; it's reference "how to do it right" for every brand. This stems primarily from them being strongly influenced by THX (including commercial THX Cinema) installation criteria. It's about acoustics, not hardware...but Procella is terrific hardware. Cheers.
Lights were fully on,it's a dark room with velvet ceiling which is hard to capture on camera. I made a follow up video with a different phone and exposure setting.
Beautiful room, seems like making all those panels the wrapping them individually is a ton of work- why not stretch the fabric and attach with fabric clips like so many do the “fabric walls”
Thank you for your kind words! Yes, it certainly is a lot of work. The reason I opted for panels instead of stretch fabric walls is to ensure easy access to the speakers and acoustic treatments whenever needed, without the hassle of removing and reattaching the fabric. That’s why I chose panels over stretch fabric.
Spotlights are fully on, it's a very dark velvet ceiling, black carpet room and hard to capture on video. I made a follow up video taken with another camera and settings.
I really like the design. My question is how effective will the dispersion panel will be that deep into the wall? Could you talk a bit about how the sound reflections would make it back to the listener?
The false side walls are approximately 25cm in depth and the acoustic absorption panels are embedded within the framing. The diffusion panels will be on the actual wall which will be slightly behind the false wall which will have acoustically transparent fabric so that the sound waves would be able to pass through for the treatments to be affective. It's no different to any other home theater or cinema that uses stretch fabric walls. Hope this helps 👍
Looking good!
Looks fantastic!
This design is absolute fire. Love the recessed sides and attention to detail. Great selection of speakers. The dark carpet really hides the transition in the floor. Very good for watching, but bad when mother in law breaks her hip on her way to the loo. ( or is it? )
Thank you for your kind words 🙏
@@UltimateHomeCinema You have a true gift or making art sir!
@@tkcdac thank you so much, your too kind 🙏
Brother, perhaps your baffle wall construction is not complete, but...if not, what you currently have done is pretty much ineffective as a baffle wall. Do you have the "Procella System Design White Paper & Installation Handbook"? Three big things stand out as big problems: The speakers are nowhere near tightly-fitted in the baffle wall. To reduce spectral dips in the mid to low frequencies of the non-subwoofer speakers caused by back reflections, they must be a very tight fit in the baffle wall, and the wall itself must be seriously rigid. Secondly, those speakers must be flush with or slightly extended past the baffle wall or you will have refraction issues off the edge of the baffle wall opening. Thirdly, check to see if what you have used for absorption on the baffle wall is adequate. I don't think it is. All these factors, including proper absorption covering recommendations are included in Chapter 6: Baffle Wall Design and Construction (page 23).
You've invested a lot of money on hardware. You will make a huge improvement on the performance of those speakers with proper baffle wall installation. Check it out. The Procella installation handbook is not just beneficial to Procella speakers; it's reference "how to do it right" for every brand. This stems primarily from them being strongly influenced by THX (including commercial THX Cinema) installation criteria. It's about acoustics, not hardware...but Procella is terrific hardware. Cheers.
Nicely done!
If you turned the lights on , one could see something
Lights were fully on,it's a dark room with velvet ceiling which is hard to capture on camera. I made a follow up video with a different phone and exposure setting.
@@UltimateHomeCinema Oh, no probs thanks
@@UltimateHomeCinema Add some video lighting, or some LED workshop lights
Well Done! Good Luck and great job!
Thank you 🙏
Beautiful room, seems like making all those panels the wrapping them individually is a ton of work- why not stretch the fabric and attach with fabric clips like so many do the “fabric walls”
Thank you for your kind words! Yes, it certainly is a lot of work. The reason I opted for panels instead of stretch fabric walls is to ensure easy access to the speakers and acoustic treatments whenever needed, without the hassle of removing and reattaching the fabric. That’s why I chose panels over stretch fabric.
WoW awesome Setup!
Thank you 🙏
Looks great man!
Thanks!
if you did not turn the lights on then why record
Spotlights are fully on, it's a very dark velvet ceiling, black carpet room and hard to capture on video. I made a follow up video taken with another camera and settings.
I really like the design. My question is how effective will the dispersion panel will be that deep into the wall? Could you talk a bit about how the sound reflections would make it back to the listener?
The false side walls are approximately 25cm in depth and the acoustic absorption panels are embedded within the framing. The diffusion panels will be on the actual wall which will be slightly behind the false wall which will have acoustically transparent fabric so that the sound waves would be able to pass through for the treatments to be affective. It's no different to any other home theater or cinema that uses stretch fabric walls. Hope this helps 👍
Nice lighting 😂
Looking good its going to be a great theatre
Thank you 🙏
Why do I think this home cinema is overkill?
This is a High End, High Channel Count, Immersive Audio Home Theater / Demo Room so for you it may be overkill, yes 👍