Cary, thanx for your attention.
My room (in feet) is: 10.5 wide x 6.5 high x 21 long.
The room is divided into 2 parts (basically half and half), with one half being a make shift living room and the other half being a project studio.
I am set up mainly in one corner. (maybe moving more to the middle will help)
My near fields are placed approx. 3 feet away from me with equal distance in between them. I tend to walk around the room and listen to the reference monitors. Once i feel that the mix sounds good, i then export to wav or aiff and have a listen to my mix on the 5.1 system through itunes.
Now, i am aware itunes has its own eq. But i guess it shouldn't matter, should it? Because if everything else(c'd's, Mp3's) sound good, then my mix should as well damnit:)
My stereo system is Logitech, and is driven by my computer soundcard. There are presets which allow me to run in different modes. (i.e. - headphones, 2.1, 4.1, and 5.1 system)
I don't have any room treatment as of yet, mainly because i am not sure how long i will be in this suite. I suppose if i could manage tacking some acoustic foam in strategic places in a way that it could be pulled off and moved, then that would seem like a good investment.
Maybe there are better reference monitors that I could purchase. But these are made by ESI (they are selfpowered) and i was told by more than one engineer that they were a good quality monitor. I also have the volume on them turned up all the way... just to insure myself that they are equally balanced. They have XLR as well as the 1/4 inch inputs. I am using the 1/4 inch. Should i rather be using the XLR?
Since i put the first post up, i have decided to take an old air mattress (that didn't seem to want to hold enough air to sleep on anymore) and place it behind my workstation. The mattress has a "felt" side. I am hoping that with it not being able to hold much air(just enough to remain standing) the felt and the density will allow for a sort of bass trap and/or "deadener".
Its worth a shot:) I know acoustic treatment is essential... but finances sometimes tend not to agree.