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Why Does My Room Sound Boomy?

That thick, muddy bass that makes your mixes sound bad everywhere else? It's probably room modes — and they're fixable.

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Find Your Problem Frequencies

Enter your room dimensions to see exactly which frequencies are building up and where to place treatment.

Use Room Modes Calculator

What Causes Boomy Rooms?

Room modes (also called standing waves) happen when sound waves reflect between parallel surfaces and reinforce themselves at specific frequencies. These frequencies are determined by your room's dimensions.

In a rectangular room, you have three types of modes:

The problem frequencies stack up differently depending on your room's length, width, and height. Small rooms with similar dimensions are the worst — they concentrate mode energy at fewer frequencies, making specific bass notes unbearably loud.

The smaller the room, the worse the problem. A 10×12 room has modes starting around 47 Hz — right in the bass guitar and kick drum range. Larger rooms push problem frequencies lower where there's less musical content.

Why Corners Are the Worst

Sound pressure from room modes builds up most in corners and along walls. This is why:

This also explains why putting your speakers or subwoofer in a corner makes bass seem louder — you're coupling to the room modes where they're strongest.

How to Fix Boomy Bass

1. Bass Traps in Corners

Thick absorbers (4"+) in corners absorb bass energy where it's concentrated most. Floor-to-ceiling traps are most effective.

2. Optimize Listening Position

Move your chair away from walls. The "38% rule" — position at 38% of the room length — often avoids the worst nulls.

3. Move Speakers Off Walls

Pulling speakers 2-3 feet from the front wall reduces coupling to modes. Use the calculator to find optimal distances.

4. Consider Room Dimensions

If building new, use "golden ratios" like 1:1.28:1.54 to spread modes more evenly across frequencies.

Thin foam panels don't help bass. Standard 1-2" acoustic foam only absorbs high frequencies. For bass, you need thick, dense materials — minimum 4" of rigid fiberglass or rockwool, or purpose-built bass traps.

What the Calculator Tells You

The Room Modes Calculator shows:

With this information, you can:

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