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Russell-I have tried crossing axes but not yet at so close a listening position. That'll be tomorrow's experiment, I'm on glass #3 (Saturday night baby) by now and I hate screwing and unscrewing floor spikes. Well. I guess if it's just toeing them I don't have to. Heh. Btw I use the same method for checking the angle (I thought I invented that!)Robin-I agree that the depth seems better this way, more the sense of people playing behind the speakers. Don't know if that's more the distance from the front wall or the listener proximity. I'd like to hear the Lorelei's some time, heard only good things about them. (That's a Scanspeak 8545 right?)
I've always preferred letting the sound travel a bit (as the room allows) before it hits my ears, and toeing in for better imaging. Or so I thought, until today I was romping with my 9 month old on the floor about 4 feet from the speakers, with a cellist sawing away, and thought, huh, gee... Moved my chair up to only about 7-8 feet away, speakers are just over a foot from the front wall, and now with the toe-in pointing well behind me. And I was shocked -- shocked! -- at how good the stage + imaging still was. Plus I felt delightfully closer to the stage (go figure), but without feeling too close. So one glass of red into it and I'm growing more intrigued. Even big orchestral works work great this way.Just wondering how many people enjoy their 1801s in this reach-out-and-touch way, and wondering if I'll ever go back...
Hi,I sit 9 feet from my speakers. Is this considered near field?RegardsRod
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