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NOTE: Master Set works best if done along the long wall of the listening room, as that best mitigates room reflections, however it can be done along the short wall if necessary. For the first DIY attempt, try and use the long wall.
A really minor note, the Jennifer Warnes song is not on Wasserman's Trios album, at least on the copy I have.
Hi SteveThx for pointing others and me to this calibration techniqueI am a not native English speaker, so that is where my many questions come from,1) "Set the speakers against the rear wall, and perpendicular to it."Ok i understand the first part of the sentence. but the sec. part? Normally the back side of speakers point to the rear wall. Do i have to turn the speakers 90 degrees so that tweeters "fire" parallel to the rear wall?2) "Speakers should be as far apart as reasonable. Important considerations are to keep speakers 2 to 3 feet away from side walls, and for the listener to be at the point of an equilateral triangle with the speakers"I think i understand the sec. part of the sentence. but my listening position is fixed. It is a heavy couch. So this equilateral triangle has at least one fixed spot. As soon as i move one speaker further or closer to my listening position then the width of the triangle has to change too, to keep it equilateral. I think equilateral triangle means 60 degrees angles and 3 equal lengths of sides? Or do you mean this kind of triangle is only important as soon as the exercise has successfully finished? Or do you mean for instance when listening during the exercise you constantly change your listening position to maintain this equilateral listening position, when you constantly move one speaker?3) "Master Set works best if done along the long wall of the listening room, as that best mitigates room reflections, however it can be done along the short wall if necessary. For the first DIY attempt, try and use the long wall.""..if done along the long wall " This slips beyond my understanding. The long wall is the longest wall, yes?the rear wall is the "short"wall" at least in my listening room. If i start at the short wall is this the same as start at the rear wall as in yr first instruction? ( Set the speakers against the rear wall, and perpendicular to it) Then i move one speaker into the room parallel to the long walls? Is that the same as: "..if done along the long wall "?4) SO when I start the exercise, so for instance Left speaker to rear wall and i start moving the right speaker i only move it perpendicular to the rear wall. The distance between Right speaker and side walls ( long wall) stays the same?and last my final question5) Hugh from Aspen who finally did it too followed a slightly diff approach. When moving the first speaker ( Right) you disconnect the left. When Right found it's sweet spot, you connect LEFT, keep RIGHT connected and follow your instructions. It looks like it make sense to me.ehh not my last question but probably it is embedded in question 26) when moving speakers what is your listening position? The final one that you normally sit in?and this is almost last 7) My dipole speakers are soooo heavy. cant i do the exercise with two smaller ones that do cover the bass from 60 hz and up and then when they both found the sweet spot replace them with the final ones and play a bit around those spots? playing a bit still means only in one dimension further or closer to the rear wall? question 4) If i sit in my listening position and more and more i move one speaker closer to me, the sound becomes much louder from the one closer to me to a point that the stereo image completely shifts to the closest speaker. It is as if all music comes from that spaker. But somehow that is not what i think you mean with: "..there is a zone where it all seems to come from one speaker with both playing."thxkyrill
I have a couple questions too. 1. Must Master Set be repeated when furniture is moved? 2. Speakers should be moved along a perpendicular path from the front wall, not along the toed in speaker angle, right?Thanks