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Could I borrow your room, please?I promise not to make a mess.
Oh, I was picturing the room coming to me.I'll have to do some recalculating.
I have an irregularly shaped room, but essentially I have the 1.7s out about 4' from the front wall. Sounds pretty good with a wide sound stage, but still working on getting some depth from the soundstage. Once the amp is ready to go again, that is.
I've been doing the stupidest thing for months:I got it into my head that because the 20.7s are physically larger than the 3.7s they would have to be pulled out further into the room.I was worried that the bass would be too overbearing and boomy.This morning I put them in the exact same spot that the 3.7s occupied and guess what? Success!I ended up with them 55" out from the front wall which is the magic spot here.How far out is everyone else running theirs?
How about a Limage/HK positioning with the speakers by the sidewalls without toe in, pulled 13 feet into your 30 ft long room, you sit a few feet from the back wall? In my experiments I pulled it off for the front and middle of the orchestra but not for the back of the orchestra, which is improved but still has the "normal" presentation. The imaging is staggeringly real with full sized instruments in a space far greater than your room. Apparently my room is a tad too square to do full justice for this setup on the wide wall, but yours is nicely rectangular and should accommodate it.http://www.1pekingroad.com/zaspx/replies.aspx?topicsno=7&subjectno=874&uppersubjectno=874
I've found that depth is proportional to distance from the rear wall. The reason for this is simple -- we judge the size of an acoustic space by the timing of the reflections: if they follow the direct sound quickly, we assume that the wall is close, and vice-versa. So I'd consider pulling the speakers further out. Another thing that can help is diffusion at the first reflection points on the front wall (the place where you would see the speaker reflected in a mirror from your listening seat). This reduces the amplitude of the first reflection off the wall and makes the room acoustically larger. I've found that the shape of the wall is important. It should be essentially flat (a bit of roughness is good for diffusion). Finally, as Jim points out, some electronics do depth better than others.
You are right, I have to use diffusion in the middle of the front wall and absorption as well behind the panels, this seems to work best for my room as it makes the room acoustically narrower and yet sound bigger.Jim
Are you getting a U shaped soundstage with the HK? I loved the presentation, but couldn't solve or live with the outside of the image wrapping around to the speakers.