gaspr: Pardon my ignorance if I am wrong here but the fact that there is good bass response in the present setup but not when they are on the short wall tells me that the lack of bass has to be caused by some large cancellations?? You might think about concentrating or stacking your traps so that they might help remove some of the modal issues. It would be a lot of work but if they could be stacked at the ceiling peak, they might be in a good place to help the bass.
You can't restore a null with traps nor equalization.
Also, your perceived lack of bass may also be a result of the room loading of the bass bins due to their placement relative to the walls and surfaces.
Traps are not a magic solution. They can be used to reduce bass resonance (persistence in the time domain) and they can be used as simple absorption. But the tendency here to run for more and more absorption, be it called absorption or bass traps, is not a panacea. The focus on this one technique is akin to using amputation to cure whatever ails ya. And it should be rather obvious that this is not a very future oriented solution.
Especially if you are going to persist in playing to the short wall with an inwardly sloping ceiling, you NEED to get measurements. Lots of things are going to be dependent upon the polars of the speakers and the interaction in a very complex space. And you are going to need to measure the modes and identify their location, as this is a very convoluted space. But my off hand guess is to line the horizontal vaulted ceiling intersections with corner traps of OC705 or Roxul.
Except as absolutely necessary based upon measurements, I would avoid using panel bass traps, as you are going to very quickly deaden a room that is going to be dominated by some very nasty focused specular reflections and interacting coupled tuned spaces.
I normally prefer the long wall for speaker placement, but the ceiling presents an overwhelming challenge and is the 60 ton elephant in the room..
Short of a concave sloped ceiling, I honestly would have a hard time creating a more problematic space oriented as it is. How's that for sugar coating?
I know there are lots of personal precedence for leaving the room oriented as is, but I personally would not - but then I have the luxury of dealing with this from a purely voyeuristic perspective concerned only with the acoustics of the space...
If you want to explore a few ideas and options - regarding whatever orientation you ultimtely choose. PM me and we can chat..
EDIT: As mentioned above: I think there is a nifty and elegant solution that can turn this space into an asset! Call me.
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