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Quote Hi Danny,We listen with both speakers so wouldn't it make sense to play both speakers and try to correct for flattest response with position and room treatment?Yea but we listen in stereo. Left and right speakers don't get the same signal. If they did then we'd be listening in mono. A mono signal (like the test signal) played on two speakers will cancel each other out or couple to give you twice the output level depending on distance and wavelength. You have to shoot them individually or you won't know what you have.
Hi Danny,We listen with both speakers so wouldn't it make sense to play both speakers and try to correct for flattest response with position and room treatment?
two speakers will cancel each other out or couple to give you twice the output level depending on distance and wavelength
Is that true from 20-20,000?
Why do both my woofers do a dance on low notes? Are they playing something different?
I see by Pete's graph the canceling and the coupling, but what do you do with that?What about dual subs?
Would you care to elaborate in the acoustics circle if I start a post?
Is that true from 20-20,000? Why do both my woofers do a dance on low notes? Are they playing something different?
3' from the back wall? Any way I can talk you into going 6" on that panel? Glenn
Where, oh where, should the diffusion go?
Most likely on the side walls behind your listening postion. Not enough distance to the rear wall for it to be effective.Bryan