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I can understand how you feel about that...and I agree with you for the most part...but I think its more like when you position a subwoofer...it works better in some postions vs others...we crawl around the floor looking for the best spot for the sub..I think the bass is being influenced on by the realtaionship to walls, the ceiling, refelections etc...we arent talking about 20Hz notes...its the 40-60 + hz stuff that seems to be affected here....some speakers dont seem to have any effect but most of the ones i have owned seem to suffer from this in some way or another...Have you tried this and what are your results??Alex
Boundries is a good way to describe what I have experienced. My pair of bass reflex Dahlquist QX10's with a rear port are 20 or so inches from the rear wall and 20 inches or so from the side walls, and when they are facing straght out, parallel to the side walls they sound boomy, and when toed in a little bit,2 inches or so the boomy goes away. We arent really close to the walls so the 6/6/6 rule is not applicble here, but the 6/6/6 rule does apply when you get close to the boundries...I only know by playing with the positioning and listening and listening you will hear differences and it takes some playing with to ge the best out of your speakers and your room. When I first got in the HT stuff I was really in to calibrating the speaker level with a SPL meter, and what a difference this did...then i discovered Audessy and DTS Master Audio and another learning curve and another level of exploration and learning...I wish there was a tool or device we could plugin to a PC and have it guide us thru some simple measurements with reference tones to get us in the ballpark etc...Maybe this exits but i am ignorant in this area,,,Alex
Alex,You do have 2 good tools to use that are right in your house. They are called ears. I really try to use these suckers when ever I can. A good test record or CD is a good tool as well. I've gone down that perfection road a time or two, looking for the "perfect" speaker position. I think it's reaching for grapes in most cases. We do know there are some general rules, as Dennis and others have pointed out, but in the end it's how it sounds when you plop yourself down in your favorite chair and start a listening session.The best solution to this whole speaker placement problem is experimentation. You now know some of the general rules of behavior of sound. I think the major mistake most people make is that they get into to big of a hurry to get the speakers final resting place. Take your time. make small movements and listen to a variety of music when you put it into a new position. It takes the brain awhile to get used to the new position. Sometimes the new position can be sour grapes immediately, sometimes, you realize it was the greatest spot ever, especially the next day or 2.Anyway, if you have Songtowers to have the problem with, luck you! aaWayner
I agree George, looks like a very neat tool. Don't get me wrong, I'm not against using technology to help fine tune the speaker positions. I just know some people are going to get ultra fanatical about things like this and wear out their carpet or floor moving, moving and more moving. Let us know how it works out and how easy/difficult it was to use.One trick that I use is to use masking tape on the floor, marking the 2 front corners before moving to what I think is the even better position. After a day when I decide the new position is worse then the previous, I just bring them back to the tape positions.I also believe that speakers, within their room must have total symmetry. Easy to say, tuff to do. I use 2 small mirrors and put them on a straight front reference surface (if you have one) and find the spot I want to aim them to in the listening room. Most of the time, that spot is a few feet behind my easy chair. When I stand in that spot and can see the same image in both mirrors, I've got it dialed in. Yes, I use a tape measure to zero at least one corner of the speaker as a reference position, keeping both speakers at identical positions from the rear walls and the same for side walls. If rear wall distance is "A" distance, then I measure both speakers' reference corner and establish "A" distance for both. Then I measure out the distance from the side walls, call that distance "B". If you reference to the back outside corner of each speaker, you can use that corner as a pivot point, literally pivoting it (on a spike?) to the desired position where you think it's going to sound good. Put your mirror flat against that speaker. Go to the other speaker and toe-it in. Place the mirror in the same symmetrical postion as the other speaker. Go to your aiming spot and see if you have the same image in both mirrors. At least now, you can't blame symmetry for a lame sound.Wayner
I have the XTZ analyzer and, it is an invaluable tool. The built-in soundcard can be a little noisy, but for the money it is very good.I especially like the Spectrogram. If you can get the low frequencies under 50ms your sound will be much clearer with less overhang.Bass notes will be better defined, less boominess. I agree using your God given tools are important, but tools like this help show, how your room reacts to the changes you make!Some people are blessed with good rooms, others have to work at it using room treatments, speaker placement, soft furniture, etc. I am a big fan of treating your room, so many people have mega-buck systems in bad rooms and, wonder why the sound isn't up to their expectations.Then they go on the equipment merry-go-round, problem is the room not the electronics. Having a good room is a platform for your system to perform at its best.Joe
George (and other XTZ users),I'm looking forward to your report(s). I have several (14) Realtrap products in my room, along with a dozen ASC half rounds on the sloped ceiling. In anticipation of the repainting, and riser install in back third of room, I've taken down the ASC half rounds (am gonna sell them cuz they're wrong color,etc.) and am very interested in thinking about using an XTZ for hearing AND seeing the differences as I add or subtract room treatments during this process.
Quote from: ted_b on 23 Jan 2009, 06:08 pmGeorge (and other XTZ users),I'm looking forward to your report(s). I have several (14) Realtrap products in my room, along with a dozen ASC half rounds on the sloped ceiling. In anticipation of the repainting, and riser install in back third of room, I've taken down the ASC half rounds (am gonna sell them cuz they're wrong color,etc.) and am very interested in thinking about using an XTZ for hearing AND seeing the differences as I add or subtract room treatments during this process.Ted,This is exactly what I plan to do with all of my RealTraps panels.I did this in a very small fashion last weekend when using the SMS-1 to dial in the bass on my 5A's. My friend and I clearly saw that moving just a single RealTraps panel could impact the readings.George