Seeing the listening rooms some people have, it seems that RM40 is very particular on room placement. Also I've read that these speakers sound bad out of the box and it needs a lot of tweaking/breaking in. Is there a newbie VMPS FAQ lying around on all the tweaks etc...
I'm interested in the RM30's....I do have a dedicated theater but by no means sonically perfect and no way my wife will let me put wall/ceiling treatements all over the place. Will I have a hard time getting these things to sound good?
Thanks,
Sonny
Hi Sonny,
Don't let us scare you into thinking your room or rig is not up to the VMPS program.
Most of the VMPS line is very chameleon like in nature, and like a chameleon it can change slowly to fit its environment.
"ALL" High End speakers are room sensitive, and equipment sensitive, if you want to hear the best they have to offer.
The only difference (actually there are many) is that the VMPS can be further adjusted with the pots and in some speakers the bass damping system.
I think one other factor is that VMPS users, are a little more prone to enjoying their systems in this way. That is, they like to work more with placement, room treatments, and tuning, since it can be incredibly rewarding compared to "place and play" only.
And don't get the idea that "Place and Play" are in some way easier. In some ways they are much harder. Because they "DO" take the same care in placement and convergence to sound their best. And if your room or electronics don't like them, they"aren't" adjustable or fine tunable.
And as has been stated in other posts, the dispersive sonic radiation pattern of the VMPS ribbons is "less" prone to room interaction than most "higher dispersion" drivers.
Why do so many of us use room treatment? Simply because, the resolving qualities of these speakers makes them sound so detailed, that subtracting that "last" distracting room reflection (there will always be some) can provide such a realistic "blackness" with sound coming out of it, that it can be "breathtaking"!!!
Do you have to use room treatments to get them to sound good - NOPE.
In fact, they need less than conventional speakers to sound "good".
Only if you want to move to the next level of "audiophiledom" (not a real word) do you start slapping foam all over the walls.
If you want a speaker thats like an SUV, get some Klipsch and get thrown, bounced, and blown out of your seat.
But, if you want to sit in, and drive the Formula 1, of speakers, that will blow your hair back with the vibrant reality of sound, with detail, control and finesse, these are your speakers.
