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Alot of it is going to depend whether your speakers are front or rear ported. Rear ported *generally* need some room between it and the wall to limit "boominess". Front ported generally can be placed fairly close to the wall.
This is generally true. But with Salk Songtowers, even the rear ported ones can be placed very closely to the walls. Per Salk, the rear ported ones can be within a foot of the rear wall. I would assume if you needed them closer to the wall than that you could order the front ported versions.When I had my Songtowers I had them about 15" off the wall and about 9' apart, 18" from the side walls. Toed in until they pointed right at me. The imaged like crazy and did the disappearing act very well. Loved them. - Woody
Well for any Salk, I never angle them drastically toward the listening position as they image so well you want to take advantage of that. Every pair of the 7 I have owned have never ben towed in more than 5 degrees. This keep the soundstage wide.You have AT's coming but jumped to HT3's. You can put either close to the back wall and side walls but they are different animals and the HT3's will bass load your corners right away. So plan to treat the corners heavily with 6 inches of OC703 to smooth it out some.I have always found 8 to 9 feet between speakers and 9 feet to my ears the best when available in standard rooms.
I have several systems in the house. I am getting the Silk AT's for a smaller dedicated listening room. We have a rec room area with a pool table and some exercise equipment which is a rather large area. I have some speakers there now but have tired of them. I would like to replace those with the HT3's. The speakers would be near the pool table, that is why I cannot bring them too far off the wall. Corners are very far away, so maybe the bass would not overload in this application.
I suspect toe in preference is room defendant (with a dose of personal preference thrown in). In my room the HT2-TLs performed best when toed in almost directly at the prime LP.
They are power hogs if you did not know that. Plan on having hundreds of watts. Why not SS8's instead? Tighter bass and less power.
I would lose my mind if the speakers were pointed directly at me. Too much in my face!
suggest you consider Herbie's Audio Labs Giant Cone/Spike Decoupling Glider or Threaded Stud Glider to alleviate some strain on back (http://herbiesaudiolab.net/spkrfeet.htm#giantgl).