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Your layout seems excellent to me.If late, great John Dunlavy and the Audio Physics people are to believed, this arrangement is actually a very good one. Here's a description of the Audio Physics speaker placement method:http://www.audioasylum.com/scripts/d.pl?audio/faq/audiophysic.htmlAnd this is from my Dunlavy SC-III manual:"All of these potential problems [of short wall placement] can be avoided by simply rotating the room layout 90 degrees such the loudspeakers are located along the longest wall of the room with the listener seated adjacent to the opposite wall directly across from the center-point between the speakers. The listening position should be close enough to the back-wall (less than about one foot) to eliminate low-end standing waves between the wall and the listener.
By the way, another aspect of the Dunlavy arrangement was creating a wiiiide soundstage with a speaker separation up to 100 degrees*. I don't know how this would work with the B&Ws. You might try moving them further apart and see how you like it. *Dunlavys have symmetrically arranged drivers that are stepped in the baffle so that the whole arrangement is a monopole radiator in the far field. This makes the phantom center image very stable, allowing for wide separations without the "hole in the middle".