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Hi!Where is your main listening position(s) given that you cannot move the sofa? And where can you place your existing B&W 686 speakers or where do you plan on placing the “new” speakers?If you do not mind upload the same layout you just did but with markings of the listening position(s) and possible speaker locations since this is a shared space. We do not want to be confused about this. Please be realistic and honest.Please describe in DETAIL what your floor/ceiling and walls are made out of, ie the construction materials.If you have a live picture of the space that might be useful for us too. Thank you,Anand.
Have you tried moving your speakers to the proposed locations? It would help open up the sound stage. Note that the ideal location under this concept would be to pull them roughly 1.5 meters away from the French doors.
And regardless the coffee table is bad for floor bounce. But I envision several problems with the proposed locations:
1.) Very low spousal acceptance;
2.) Would block access to the French doors;3.) Would block the view out of the French doors;4.) Would be very disconcerting for listening through them to the TV;5.) No apparent good way to run the wires to the speakers;6.) Placing speakers in front of large amounts of glass is not recommended (glass being extremely reflective).
Is that a subwoofer you're showing between the proposed speaker locations? If so that's perhaps the worst possible place acoustically to put it. Suggest putting the (wireless) sub behind the end table at the end of the couch.
Did you mean drywall versus plaster? Believe it or not plaster is much harder/more reflective than drywall.
I use it mainly for TV, Electronic music, Soul, Hip HopI like the speed of the bass, the sharp detail in the high frequencies.It's a good system but the caveats are they are not giving any soundstage, lack of mids at low levels, that sounds boxy, it's difficult to listen for a long period of time, that becomes fatiguing as they are quiet bright, and the speakers need to be pushed at a high volume to be able to listen to all frequencies properly, which ends up by turning it down after 5mn. On the room conifguration, the speakers sounds like they are 2 km away when on the sofa, so we have to push the volume, but then it's too loud, and overload the room. Let me know what you think about this project and from your experience what couldd possibly be the cheapest way to improve the system (including the room) to a level where you can enter the living room with your family, turn on the stereo and make everybody dance and/or listen to appreciate the emotion filling the room.Note: I can't move the Sofa from the rear wall.
Note: I can't move the Sofa from the rear wall.
So is this case (copied from your 1st post)?It seems it’s a variable that you are freely manipulating in your pretty 3D plots
I would be surprised if the couch is allowed to block one of the egresses into the kitchen even with a peekaboo curtain
It's your call, but I still like my suggestion of Amphion Argon 3S sitting on either side of the TV. Other alternatives are the JBL 705P ($2000/pair) or 708P ($4000/pair) reference (professional) studio monitors also use controlled directivity and are active (built-in amps, one per driver). I owned the 708P and they are some of the very best speakers money can buy. Very dynamic, room filling, detailed, meant for mid-field listening, even have built-in DACs and room correction. But they only accept AES/EBU digital or XLR analog inputs. Either would pair well with the afore mentioned NAD C658 and would suggest putting them on either side of the TV.
I would try a diagonal setup. In acoustically difficult or odd shaped rooms, this is often a VG way to go.
I composed this reply, nearly deleted it, then decided to go ahead and post. I probably won't say anything further.Look, I think you're going to have to reconsider your assumptions, priorities, and goals. Given that your listening preferences are "TV, Electronic music, Soul, Hip Hop," you should keep in mind that there is relatively little soundstage and imaging in the recording for the speakers to reproduce. I don't mean this to sound pejorative about that, but the overwhelming majority of content should be expected to have been recorded in a studio setting or manipulated on a computer, compared to chamber or orchestral classical music, a fair amount of jazz (especially unamplified live). When it comes to electronic music or hip hop, I don't know what "the feeling of being there" means, since there is no "there" there (sorry, Gertrude Stein), but it sounds like you're looking for a different approach than most so-called audiophiles, so it may not be surprising that you haven't been impressed with your visits to local shops. For studio recordings electronic, soul, and hip hop music to sound even a little like what you've heard in in colosseums or old factories, you're going to want a surround system with subwoofers, as well as DSP and up-mixing.Not to be pedantic, but to criticize your simple, economic, realistic approach: speakers close to the wall will sound bass-heavy if not designed for that position (or in this case, the left will sound different than the right), curtains are not full-range absorption, pulling the out as you propose will have the TV off-center and the right speaker will still sound different than the left, sitting close to the wall will still have significant acoustic issues so you should still consider 4"+ of absorption behind the listening position. Think about four subwoofers in your room, similar to http://www.audiokinesis.com/the-swarm-subwoofer-system-1.html
You haven't commented much on the diagonal suggestion, which for me is the only solution here. Put both the TV and the speakers in the corner of the far wall, next to the fireplace. The sectional will not be against any wall or block any egress, but rather float in the room opposite from the corner with the TV in front of both the French doors and dining room access with a couple feet between. In all of the other configs you can't sit in all locations on the couch and watch TV or listen to music, and nowhere on the couch can anyone see the fireplace. In the diagonal you can sit almost anywhere on the sectional and do all three. And it's the only config that the room looks balanced from a design perspective, everything else is lopsided. Lastly, your best acoustics will come from the diagonal placement of the speakers, no hard early reflections.