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I believe there are a few 1801 listeners using a near field arrangement, but the number is very small.
I find that, realistically, in the average home no more than one person wants to listen closely to something. For everyone else involved in other things the quieter the better, although "background levels" are usually acceptable. With the set up I described on page 1 of this thread there was a relatively extreme difference between levels in the chair and the rest of the house, which was part of the plan. It was nice to be able to enjoy decent loudness without bothering anyone. Most of the time the speakers would be swiveled out for casual listening. Of course with this arrangement they were too close together for "proper" stereo placed just each side of a chair, but I don't listen for imaging when I'm walking around the house!It did help that they were small, light and floor standing. This wouldn't work for a spiked setup unless the stand top was big enough to allow the speaker to be turned around on it and the speaker itself was not on spikes.All that is needed is a speaker whose sound comes together at those close distances. Do the 1801s? I haven't heard them.cheers
What makes a good speaker for nearfield listening? Coherence (drivers must be physically close and should have very similar voicing around the crossover frequency with no phase inverting between drivers) and a non-forward/hot/agressive presentation (deep soundstage).
What makes a good speaker for nearfield listening? Coherence (drivers must be physically close and should have very similar voicing around the crossover frequency with no phase inverting between drivers) and a non-forward/hot/aggressive presentation (deep soundstage).
Here is that article from avguide.com, the online respository of reviews and articles for The Absolute Sound and The Perfect Vision magazines.http://www.avguide.com/file-download?review=800Nice article, Thanks Steven!Rich
wow - the above is nearly *exactly* how I have my room configured.
So I turned 90 degee and place the speakers along the long wall, about 8ft apart, and I sat only 6ft away. This near-field listening is truely an eye-opening experience.
My speakers are at about 5 1/2 feet for most of my listening, but they have to be for my work which involves critical listening 1/2 the time. Call me weird, but I really like to hear what is on the recording, and the less of your room you hear the more of the recording space (if there is one) you hear.I really like the sound of good speakers outdoors, even though there is no room "help".
I take it the effect is ruined if your room is open on one side, i.e. having the speakers against the long wall would result in open space to the right of the right speaker and a wall to the left of the left speaker.
Wall with openings is now to the right. Speakers are still around 8 feet apart, now a little less than a foot from the front wall, listener still about 8 feet away, but the axes are now crossing behind the listener, who is a little over a foot from the back wall, which are mostly taken up by large windows. (Blinds can be pulled.)This arrangement sounds...better! See, I had tried this kind of thing with my previous speakers, which were Revel F30s, in a different room of the same width, and it just didn't work. Maybe I didn't do it right, maybe those speakers were too big.