MGBert - I've been re-reading your threads on the FRTs and have three follow-up questions:
1) Where does Josh fully present his idea that reflections <10ms must be eliminated? I assume this is an old studio engineer rule-of-thumb. I'm interested in the objective here - I assume it's the simulation of a concert hall.
2) In the drawings from your first FRT plan (other thread), it looks to me like you've eliminated all reflections, so that the listener only hears the direct sound wave from the Maggie. Is that accurate? In the drawing on this thread, I can see a number of vectors which would result in reflections <10ms. (e.g. backwave from Maggies at a 150 degree angle against the backing wall.) I must be missing something so please explain your objective in general terms.
3) Because treble dissipates faster than lower frequencies, sitting nearfield like you do would seem to accentuate higher frequencies. Does that happen in your set-up? Is that one of the reasons you use the Behringer?
Any comments are welcome - I'm trying to understand this and apply it to my room.
Hope you are well.
Hey jult52:
First off, doing OK; thanks for asking. Glad to see you're trying this out. Keep in mind this has been trial and error, so there might be some "try it and see" beyond "theory". That said...
1) I'm sure Josh358 will weigh in, but I think 10 msec comes from the Floyd Toole book "Sound Reproduction". Haven't read it myself, but it's on order so I can become even more dangerous.

I've actually seen 15 msec online as the magic number, but in my space it was hard enough to squeeze out 10 so I made that a realistic goal. And the significance of the 10 msec number is that a reflection of a signal less than 10 msec after that signal is not differentiated by the listener as an echo, but rather as a comb filtering of the original signal. Comb filtering sounds pretty bad, reducing clarity. Particularly to the "phantom center". As a test: play a mono recording through just one speaker, then through both and compare the clarity. In my cramped space, there is a definite degradation, but I find the FRTs help immensely to fix it.
2) For better or worse, I started out with the assumption that human ears will interpret early reflections from behind the listener to mean that they are near a back wall, vice mess up the main signal. My experience has been that this is the case. And yes, the angle as shown on my sketch does make it appear that some of the "trapped" reflections could make it to the listener within 10 msec. Actually, in practice I used a mirror against the reflective surface of the FRT to ensure that, when I was standing in the front wall/side wall corner, I would see the rear surface of the MMG centered in the mirror. Probably not the best sketch, since it does make it appear that the reflections are NOT aimed at the corner...

That's where the try it and see comes in. My thought is that, once the reflection is aimed at the corner, it will take it a long time to finally escape... with much reduced amplitude. In effect, I'm turning the MMGs into nearly line source mini monitors, taking room reflections (except rear wall and the reflections of the right speaker from the left wall, which is greater than 10 msec) out of the picture.
3) As you can see from the Behringer RTA plot of the unequalized response in page 2 of this thread
http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=118426.0, the big issue is midrange in my room. In order to get the side wall reflection coincide with the side null of the MMG, the tweeter is angled to aim behind my head. That helps tame the treble response, I think.
Please write again if you have more questions, or if these answers weren't clear. Most of all, have fun!
MGbert