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Recently I was thinking about speaker placement and the 10 ms recommendation for delay from the sidewall. This general rule applies to most speaker designs although it may be less important with planar speakers and their figure-8 dispersion pattern. The intent is to separate reflected sounds from directly radiated sounds by a sufficient amount of time to minimize sonic smearing. Acoustical studies apparently identified 10 ms as the minimum desired time delay.So further thinking about planars I realized the same concept should apply to the front wall and its reflections. Not being an expert with acoustics I sent a note to Jim Smith (I trust you all realize his relationship to Magnepan) asking if my concept seemed valid. He concurred.Since one ms is approximately one foot in distance, I realized the "ideal" placement for any planar should be at least 5' out from the front wall to provide the desired separation of direct from reflected sound (in this case more likely spatiality than smearing, although that could be an element too). Understand that delay can also be achieved by diffraction at the front wall reflection point or reduced by absorption. Thus Maggie and other planar owners can improve their set up with either of those applications when they must place their speakers closer than 5' from the front wall.
"So if an instrument is 20' from the rear wall of a stage shell, and your speakers are only 5' from the rear wall, the early reflection in your room is going to reduce the apparent size of the acoustic"Josh, if your example refers to a recording of an instrument 20' out from the shelll, then I'm reminded of J Gordon Holt's criticism of the Bose 901 speakers in Stereophile many years ago. Dr. Bose claimed he was replicating the percentage of reflected sound in a typical concert hall with his design. But Gordon pointed out nearly all recordings already captured those reflections so it was a false characteristic with the 901s. If you meant compared to a live audition then ignore this.My point was to suggest clarification on why a minimum of 5' out for any dipole speaker would be helpful by separating direct sound at the listener's ears from reflected sounds. It seems reasonable that greater distances than 5' could be even better. However, it is nice to know there is a limit, even if very few of us could place our speakers more than 15' into the room!
So if placement experimentation and room treatments wasn't enough of an exercise for Maggie owners, Magnepan now wants its owners to tune their bass with one or more bass panels. I am not doubting that properly done you end up with a great sounding speaker "system", but this marketing approach may confuse, frustrate, and price some into looking elsewhere. If to make it sound right you now have to plan another $800 or $1600 outlay the value is starting to erode some. Having said that, I enjoyed very much using a subwoofer with my 1.7s to make the system complete. My sub was over $800 in cost. It is just different when users drive themselves to these changes rather than the manufacturer "admitting" or suggesting panels alone may not be enough. We'll see how well this is accepted with buying dollars.
OK, I am interested, but I am also confused. Visit Magnepan's web site and read the manuals for the DWM or DW1 http://www.magnepan.com/product_manuals, then read the following http://www.magnepan.com/using_DWM. Sorry guys but there is not a lot there to get me to buy a pair of DWM's. What we really need (for those of us that are still struggling with this DWM concept is a clear document/white paper that that starts at A and goes to Z in explaining theory and application. Since we are discussing pairing these with 1.7s and above, the discussion should emphasize set up with these speakers.It also seems to me that some sort of crossover and volume balancing scheme should be used.Help me out!
Josh,I carefully read both of your recent posts. The first is quite clear and IMO much better than the information (somewhat contradictory) that what Magnepan presents. The second post illustrates some of the confusion that exists concerning the application of connecting the DWMs to a system. I am going to contact Magnepan this week and see if I can get some clarity.