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Generally, out from the rear wall as much as possible. Usually out from the side walls, however I may try a new placement mentioned on the threads I linked that have them hard against the side walls, go figure. Width as much as possible without losing the center image. I think this makes more sense than the 1/3 and 1/5 rules, but there are many proponents for those as well, especially the 1/3 for speaker and LP, which makes the most sense to me for those types of placements.
I was lucky enough to have Scot Markwell who was Harry Pearsons set up man. Pearsons room is ideal for Maggies . They measure flat in his room. Anyway, Scot moved our speakers [ 3As] closer together with the tweeters on the "inside". Our room is 17ft long with an irregular width that varies. About 6' apart with 20-degree toe in. Then he moved the listening chair back and forward to get the sweet spot, done. Toe- in was adjusted accordingly. Toe - in was the biggest factor IMO as well as speakers being closer together.
Jonathan Valin also recommended that the Magnepans should not be placed too widely apart as this would weaken midbass impact and image focus. How far away from the panels is your listening position? I am about 13 feet away from my 3.7´s, don´t like near field listening with large panels.
Nearfield is always the real sound the speakers produce, with as little as possible reflection and sound being produced from the room.13 feet away is a lot if the speakers are not wide apart, on the other hand it is nearfield if they are 13 feet or more apart.
You shouldn't excess the equilateral triangle much.
I have not found the equilateral triangle to be anything useful beyond a starting point. Quite the contrary, I found both very narrow triangles and very flat triangles provide better results in terms of precision (narrow) or natural soundstaging (wide and away from the front wall), the equilateral triangle is not really a better compromise, it either errs towards the properties of a far listening position or a flat one depending on the room acoustics.
The best way is to test it out in your room and if you hear good you will define the correct position. Also you must try unconventional positions and placement. Not just with the book in your hands and making +- 5 inch movements from the suggested placement.