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My speakers are Merlin VSM-M, a two way floor standing speaker. My current listening room is medium size 14x18. Its a shared family room. My problem is that room is becoming more of a family room than listening room. In other words, my room is continuously occupied by someone other than me and I'm not able to listen to music when I want to (its not fair, especially since I pay the bills). Therefore, I've been contemplating moving the listening room to a room in my basement. There are several problems with the basement room. The first is its quite narrow. The width is 12'. The length is over 2x that, 25' maybe. If I went short wall placement, I can see the speakers at 3' from each side wall and then 6' apart. I can't really see long wall placement since I'd be forced to sit too close to the speakers. The second issue is that the room has a lot of junk that has no where else to go (getting rid of the stuff isn't a viable solution, at least not until the wife says it is). If I go with short wall speaker placement, I should have enough room to get the speakers out from the wall behind them by 3 1/2' to 4'. The problem is the junk in front of the speakers. There is a very low sitting futon sofa that will have to sit in front of one of the speakers. The sofa is agains the side wall. It will not be blocking the woofer, but it must be, I assume, absorbing much of the forward dispersion of the speaker. The only way to avoid this situation would be to get the speaker further away from the sidewall, but this would put the speakers too close together at under 5' apart, especially if I aimed for symetry by getting the other speaker at an equidistant from the other sidewall. (Hope this is all making some sense.)So, I guess the questions are:1) for such a narrow room, is long wall placement out of the question (I think it is, but I'm keeping an open mind to all ideas).2) do the speakers have to be equidistant from the sidewalls; should placement be symetrical.3) how awful would it be to have the sofa in front of the left speaker even though the sofa sits low enough to the ground that it would not be obstructing the woofer or tweeter. 4) is 3' from the sidewalls enough or am I going to have noticeable sidewall reflection problems. Note: since its a basement room, bass traps are possible, though I'd only be able to use them behind the speakers. Also, I currently use mildly absorbent treatments such as the Room Tunes pack and the Eightnerve triangles in the corners in my current listening room and, of course, they be easily moveable to the basement room. Thanks in advance for any help, thoughts and ideas.
I'm doing nearfield in a small room - 12 x 13. Speakers are about 6' apart (center to center) out from the front wall 3 feet or so, and I sit 4-5 feet out from the front baffle of the speakers. The room was unlistenable prior to getting about $1,000 worth of GIK treatments. Now it sounds pretty darn good, especially considering the small size. Here's a link to my blog on the room and acoustical treatments... http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=57818.0The treatments were probably the best bang for the buck I've ever spent on audio equipment. I also find the nearfield totally acceptable. I'm close to the performance, but the resolution and image are very nice (and transparent). Only serious down side is limited front to back depth. Otherwise the sound is very impressive -- and musically satisfying. Good luck, Kent
Quote from: Alwayswantmore on 29 Aug 2008, 01:24 amI'm doing nearfield in a small room - 12 x 13. Speakers are about 6' apart (center to center) out from the front wall 3 feet or so, and I sit 4-5 feet out from the front baffle of the speakers. The room was unlistenable prior to getting about $1,000 worth of GIK treatments. Now it sounds pretty darn good, especially considering the small size. Here's a link to my blog on the room and acoustical treatments... http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=57818.0The treatments were probably the best bang for the buck I've ever spent on audio equipment. I also find the nearfield totally acceptable. I'm close to the performance, but the resolution and image are very nice (and transparent). Only serious down side is limited front to back depth. Otherwise the sound is very impressive -- and musically satisfying. Good luck, KentWow. You do sit close. How do you like your Omegas? I've recently developed an interest in trying some single drivers.
Quote from: Alwayswantmore on 29 Aug 2008, 01:24 amI'm doing nearfield in a small room - 12 x 13. Speakers are about 6' apart (center to center) out from the front wall 3 feet or so, and I sit 4-5 feet out from the front baffle of the speakers. The room was unlistenable prior to getting about $1,000 worth of GIK treatments. Now it sounds pretty darn good, especially considering the small size. Here's a link to my blog on the room and acoustical treatments... http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=57818.0The treatments were probably the best bang for the buck I've ever spent on audio equipment. I also find the nearfield totally acceptable. I'm close to the performance, but the resolution and image are very nice (and transparent). Only serious down side is limited front to back depth. Otherwise the sound is very impressive -- and musically satisfying. Good luck, Kentdouble - or even triple - the thickness of sound absorption on the rear wall, & slide your chair back up against it & see if soundstage depth improves... and, if you run a single mono sub, try centering it between the speakers, even trying a nearfield placement w/it.doug s.
I have a 4' x 4' area of 6" GIK Monster Traps on back wall, and part of the same wall opens to a closet and hallway, reducing surface area to one degree or another. The sub is between the speakers slightly off center (off center based on recommendations from Bryan). I'll try moving the chair to the back wall and see what happens.
Alwayswantmore,I thought I read that you put a table directly under your LCD, and then placed your spare 242 on top to cover the LCD.Is that why you cannot center your sub? I agree with Doug in moving your listening position back, and re-adjusting the toe of your spkrs... but, IMO to get more depth, you have to move your spkrs further away from the front wall. Especially since you do not have any panels directly behind your spkrs.hartwerger, Sorry for the thread hijack.