I'm posting this Private message between Chris and I for public consumption:
mcrespo71 wrote:
BTW, I measured my DE Capo I's in room subjective bass response and they were not flat at all!!!! They were down at the 100 and 80 hz tones and flat or slightly up on the 60, 50, 40 hz tones- had audible bass output at the 30 hz tone and I could still hear the 20 hz tone, but I'd bet they were down 15-20db's here.
I was shocked when that guy said his DC's had measure really flat in his room. He must have some great room. My measured performance is more similar to yours, I'm afraid. Chalk it up to room acoustics. Getting flat frequency response in a non-treated (and I mean REALLY treated) space without digital eq is just impossible. The higher 50-60 is probably a room node. I just remember that mine started rollong off a lot sooner in the bass than I'd have wanted -- around 100 hz things were already down. I have a reasonable size room, so maybe the DC don't 'energize' it or whatever the same way a speaker with a larger cabniet or multiple bass drivers would.
mcrespo71 wrote:
Unfortunately, I can't move the speakers around much to try and make them flat in my room. I've found a spot that sounds the best and allows me to sit 8 1/2 to 10 feet from the speakers while allowing for adequate soundstaging. How is one supposed to measure the distance from the speaker to the back wall? From the rear of the speaker it is 2 feet 7 inches to the back wall and from the front/top baffle it is 3 feet 4 inches. I don't know which one is correct to quote?
I think it's correct to quote the former: from the back of the speaker. This gets tricky with toe-in. "The center of the back of the speaker was 55" off the wall, toed-in 10 degrees," would be the reviewer prose, I guess.
In your room, your best bet is probably just to listen nearfield and get rid of the room. (Unfortunatley it's very awkward for me to do this.)
Another thing you can play around with re: FR is the height of the speaker. The distance from the floor and ceiling boundaries will affect the bass room interaction. If you can vary your seating height to accomodate the difference with re: the tweeter height, you can re-balance your speakeres that way. Actually I found that I preferred listening closer to the main driver axis anyway when I raised mine.
mcrespo71 wrote:
I love this forum and thanks for starting it up. This speaker blows me away!
Me too! I'm always listening to dealer demos or other systems and wondering where the dynamic life is. You really can't go back...
Oh shit. We should put this in the circle somewhere for public consumption...
- chris
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