j0hnbarker:
So are we saying that if we hooked a signal generator up to some Beolab 5s in a room less than 17ish metres long, and set it at 20Hz, a perfectly functioning human ear couldn't pick out this frequency? If we are then what is the point of going down to the limits of what a perfect human ear can achieve, if room size is always going to be a limiting factor?
In a room which is exactly 17.24 metres long you would actually get a 6dB boost at 20 Hz, so it'd be twice as loud.
If you were in a room which was exactly 8.62 metres long, and you didn't get reflections of the side-walls, ceiling and floor (which never happens), you only had one BeoLab 5 generating noise, and you were stood at 0º to the BeoLab 5 (ie, not off to one side) then a 20Hz tone would completely cancel itself out. As soon as you start to introduce any degree of complexity, such as listening to the BeoLab 5 at an angle, adding in a second BeoLab 5, adding in other reflections and room dimensions, changing the shape of the room, adding in furnishings, adding in surfaces which don't reflect as much (bass traps), adding in (very) large objects which will reflect the sound waves in an irregular fashion (and many other things) then you start to get much, MUCH more complex behaviour.
Acoustics are incredibly complicated, and can seem completely chaotic to anyone but the most mathematically minded person, and the room is actually a bigger part of the sound of your music than the speakers, amplifier, CD player and often, recording quality put together.
As an eye-opener, you'll see the term 'critical distance' thrown around in the world of professional sound reinforcement, which refers to the distance from the speaker where you're actually hearing more sound from the room than you are from the speaker itself. In most lounges/living rooms, this is around half a metre. To put this another way, if you want to hear the sound of your speaker, and not the sound of your room, you need to be sat less than half a metre from your speaker. The better the acoustics in your room, the further the 'critical distance'.
I've actually strayed off-topic slightly as bass is a little different because it's wavelengths are so large. The whole critical distance thing is kind of more related to higher frequencies/the midrange. This is why Bang & Olufsen puts acoustics lenses in their speakers. If most of the sound you're hearing is sound which has come out of the side of your speaker and bounced off a wall into your ear, isn't it therefore important that your speakers sound good from the side as well? It's all well and good sounding fantastic when measured right in front of the speaker, but that's not the sound which is being fired into your room, unless there's an acoustic lens on the speaker (meaning it sounds exactly the same throughout 180º).
Where it's important to understand the acoustic lens is that it doesn't mean you can place the speaker wherever you want in the room and not take room acoustics into consideration. You still need a room which sounds good in order to have allow the BeoLab 5 to sound decent. If anything, in an acoustically awful room, the acoustic lens will actually make things worse!
Coming back to the original topic, the same goes for the adaptive bass of the BeoLab 5. It can compensate for the overall bass dips and boosts that every room exhibits, but it cannot compensate for simply poor, almost unpredictable room acoustics you get in the worst spaces. I've heard BeoLab 5s in some rooms which sound awful throughout their frequency range. A bad room acoustic is a bad room acoustic and there's not much you can do about it. Even the world's most complex EQ won't do much as the sound will change as you move around in the room. The EQs built into hifi systems cannot really do anything at all, as they affect EVERY sound above a certain frequency for the treble control, and EVERY sound below a certain frequency for the bass control. Room-related acoustic issues are almost always at very specific frequencies.
Well that's my dissertation done...