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Yes, I did give it a week or two, ready for more torture. I forgot the words so I need to hear it again... haha I like the room this way better anyway, the soundstage is huge with far away sidewalls. So I hope it can be tamed by MS. I told my wife I would be playing "that song" again, she was glad she would not be home tomorrow. To clarify, the first step is basically to get the speakers as far apart as possible while still maintaining a solid mono center image, and 3+ft distance from sidewalls? This is done with speakers perpendicular to, and close against the front wall. Do I have that right? ThanksTwo great "mono" recordings that I love are Miles Davis 'Kind of Blue' which I have listened to since my father gave me the LP in 1977. so I know it very well. It seems like stereo, but actually it is a 3 track recording, Center, left and right, as is Sketches of Spain. They are both recorded live with plenty of spill into all the mics, so it sounds like a coherent stereophonic soundfield, but the images in the center are actually true mono, without panning effects. Miles' image on the center track is like granite and is great for setting width. It was state of the art for Columbia Records in 1956. The other is a true mono recording of Clifford Brown / Max Roach Quintet, Clifford playing 'I Don't stand a Ghost of a chance with You,' a great recording from Capital studio B in Hollywood from 1954, with the whole band dead center.Rich
Thanks Steven, that makes sense. I understand that the listening chair is placed to make equilateral triangle when speakers are against the wall at step one. Then you just leave it in same place throughout the master set procedure, even though the speakers move out from the wall making isosceles triangle. When finished you can move the listening seat farther back to restore equilateral triangle? Or should the Master set procedure be done using the final listening position from the beginning, even if it is farther away than an equal triangle? In this setup my listening chair is 13 feet back from speakers at the start and about 11 feet after it is done. Speakers are about 10feet apart so I have some flexibility. I can put the chair anywhere, so what is ideal? ThanksAnd Thanks to Hugh for allowing this thread to continue, even though it's not not directly related to Aspen products. My friend Carlman wants me to try AKSA now that I am starting to build DIY amps. He introduced me to you at RMAF07.Rich
Steve-FYI- Your Master Set instructions were discussed on TAS Reviewer - Robert E. Greene's forum. See:http://groups.yahoo.com/group/regsaudioforum/message/27225Dan
Master Set gave me nice bass on the long wall, but not much help for the massive echo at the rear of the room, it colors midrange too much. The other shorter wall is better in my case. Thanks.Listening for the image panning especially in bass notes helped to lock in the 2nd speaker's position, good idea.Rich
So close to the wall! Nice system Steven. Thanks
So how far from speakers do you sit?Toe in seems pretty extreme.
"Taken from just behind the listening area seat"Simply incredible that you'd place your chair this far off center axis to obtain a wide deep soundstage. Guess this is something that needs to be experienced in order to really understand what's taking place here. Thanks for sharing your pictures as it really helps understand what's really being accomplished here with this "Master Set", even if I don't completely understand how to accomplish it myself. Cheers,Robin
I believe I wrote that I did not sit in the center as the fireplace is in the way. I prefer sitting as I do as that's where the chair is placed in the room. The sound is the same, whether I sit in the middle of the room or comfortably as I do. I never mentioned anything about sitting to the right to obtain a wide deep soundstage. The "soundstage" is between the speakers no matter where in the room that I sit.
Quote from: stvnharr on 12 Apr 2009, 07:58 amI believe I wrote that I did not sit in the center as the fireplace is in the way. I prefer sitting as I do as that's where the chair is placed in the room. The sound is the same, whether I sit in the middle of the room or comfortably as I do. I never mentioned anything about sitting to the right to obtain a wide deep soundstage. The "soundstage" is between the speakers no matter where in the room that I sit.Yes you did in fact mention about the fireplace, I wasn't questioning anything about why or where your seating is placed. I was simply taking for granted that you were experiencing a wide deep sound stage from where you sit. Was I wrong to assume this? If as you say the sound stage is between the loudspeakers no matter where you sit in the room, then there is no "sweet spot", right? If you wouldn't catagorize your sound stage as being wide or deep, how would you describe it? Is the imaging also the same no matter where you're sitting in the room? Sorry for all these questions but your above statements have me totally lost as what's actually being accomplished here as far as the type of sound stage that I'm accustomed to and the type of sound stage presense you're actually experiencing. Thanks.Cheers,Robin
Robin,I'll do my best to answer your questions about soundstaging.
... There is essentially NO sweet spot with properly done Master Set. The musical images are firmly set in a near perfect stereo image between the two speakers that does not change with one's seating in the room. The seating in the listening room is much like seating at a venue, in that you just move your own perspective to the musicians, but the musicians don't move with you as you move. Over in my far left seat, the music stays between the speakers, but I do have a different perspective to the sound as I am so far to the left. I don't listen here much at all. In a venue, I generally prefer to sit in the middle, and if the fireplace was not in the way, I would do so here. Indeed, until I got Master Set done well, I used to sit on a moveable chair in front of the fireplace to listen.It may have been lost in the reading about Master Set long ago, but when the two speakers equally pressurize the room, you hear them equally from most anywhere in the room. When they are unequal, you generally hear the one that is loudest from your seating position.I kind of think you are asking me about "3-D soundstaging" that I might be experiencing here. Afterall, when you put the speakers well out into the room, you get that big 3-D effect from all the reflections. Well, with MS you don't get the big 3-D effect because there really aren't any reflections to muddy and diffuse things.I've found the "3-D soundstaging" with MS to be rather interesting. I've very conscious of it as I am sitting up close, nearly like being in the first few rows at symphony hall, or the like. The sound is seems to just float in space. The sound seems to float back to the wall without touching it, and almost making the wall invisible. And, as always, the sound never really comes forward from the front baffles of the speakers. All I can add is that when I listen, the sound seems perfectly proportioned and quite like that of a performance....
I have a very symmetrical room: approximately 24' x 14.5' x 16' (high). There is no back wall, per se, because the listening/living room is one end of a 24' x 45' x 16' (high) space; the long front wall of the listening/living room is therefore, the end of the larger space. My speakers were already located on the long front wall approximately 10-11' apart and almost equidistant from the two side walls (actually, one is 10" closer to the side wall than the other). When I began to attempt the MS speaker alignment procedure, it was easy to find the point where the anchor speaker began to decouple from the other speaker. But (to my ears, anyway), it never fully decoupled from the other speaker, and there was no place when the two recoupled - no matter how far I moved the anchor speaker out from the front wall. So, I merely picked the point closest to the front wall where the two "first" decoupled and began to look for the bass nodes. Again, no matter how much (or little) I moved the anchor speaker, there seemed to be little change in bass resonance. So, I finally repositioned the anchor speaker where it "first" decoupled from the other speaker and then moved the other speaker out from the front wall to mirror the position (10" from the front wall) and toe-in (45°) of the anchor speaker. Similar to "MS Light" that Steve described yesterday. I am curious why I could not find a point where the speakers recoupled. I am also curious why I could not find the nodes where bass resonance evened out. Is it the very symmetrical nature of the listening room? Or the fact that the speakers pressurize such a large space?Nevertheless, I would agree with Steve, the presentation is much closer to what I hear at a concert compared to the typical idealized audiophile image. (I checked again Saturday night when I attended a performance of Brahms' German Requiem and then played a recording of the same piece when I returned home.) I may need to tweak the speaker position a little to better center the image when sitting far off axis, but this is a very enjoyable way to listen to music. The sound is much more enveloping; the soundstage is still wide (wider than the speakers, in my opinion), but not very deep; and the members of the orchestra and chorus and the soloists occupy different places in the image, but without holographic precision. Again, similar to a concert performance.Gary