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I have always understood nearfield listening to mean that the distance between speakers is always greater than the distance from the listener to either speaker.See this Audio Physics method in this link:http://www.gcaudio.com/resources/howtos/speakerplacement.htmlAm I wrong?TGC,Read somewhere many years ago that the distance between speakers has to be between 6-12ft for proper stereo integration. Notice you have this at 5ft. I am now wondering if this 6ft minimum thing is not really true.Placement always depends on the speakers, so in the absense of any guidelines from the manufacturer as to placement I guess you can use or adapt a method thats best for you and your room.
Nearfield ... where the listener is hearing more direct than reverberant (or "room") sound
Quote from: Russell Dawkins on 22 Jun 2007, 07:47 amNearfield ... where the listener is hearing more direct than reverberant (or "room") soundYes, this is the key. As a professional recording engineer I greatly prefer near field, even in a large room where "near" can be pretty far away. Otherwise, the room you listen in adds its own unique coloration to everything you play. And when that happens you have no chance to hear what the original mixing engineers intended.--Ethan
So, are you saying buy a pair of headset and forget the room treatment?
Quote from: woodsyi on 22 Jun 2007, 02:07 pmSo, are you saying buy a pair of headset and forget the room treatment? Why headphones when a pair of LS3/5a (in the very nearfield), for all their faults, which are many, can provide an imaging/soundstaging experience that is mo' betta than reality????