0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 99077 times.
Laurie, you gotta hear this!!
Did you take any measurements after performing Master Set to confirm that you've even out the bass?What are the dimensions of Hugh's listening room?
Any time, amigo, bring it on. Today, perhaps?
Hugh-Mahalo for the info.Steve-Measurements of the in room speaker response using a calibrated mic at the listening postion and a PC based measurement programcan help confirm speaker placement.Room dimensions can also be used to determine speaker postions that will minimize the interaction of room nodes, see: http://www.cardas.com/content.php?area=insights&content_id=27&pagestring=Room+SetupI've also found that it helps to decouple the speakers from the floor by using isolation platforms like the Townshend or devises like the Symposium Rollerblock Jr.Aloha,Dan
Hi Steve,Last year when I was at a friends place he used the Master Set method of speaker algnment in a room. The first time I had heard of it and since nearly forgotten about it. The speaker alignment was satisfactorily done in less than a half hour. Later, after about 1/2 of set up a sweep with a Cardias equipment was completed. And although there were a lot of numbers produced they indicated that the speaker placement was about spot on. As long as one knows what you are listening for IMHO the ears have it!We have a holiday house and to set up a reasonably good listening area has defied every attempt to date. One speaker stuffed under a breakfast bar and the other is free standing at least 2 meters (6') from anything. Solution; wreck the room/house and completely alter it to suit music. Unfortunately there are some listening areas which are far from optimum and the poor old speakers are blamed for poor sound.Cheers,Laurie
The most important part of setting speakers in the room is where they sit in relation to each other so that each speaker pressurizes the room equally. This can get to be a rather long winded explanation that will likely only confuse, so I'll leave it.
Quote from: stvnharr on 14 Mar 2009, 01:47 amThe most important part of setting speakers in the room is where they sit in relation to each other so that each speaker pressurizes the room equally. This can get to be a rather long winded explanation that will likely only confuse, so I'll leave it.At your convenience and pleasure Steve, I would very much like for you to indulge us in your ideas and understanding about Master Set. The subtleties are always the hard part to grasp. Your experience doing it a few times is valuable to us who are learning to do it. Rich
Steve,I'm a little like Laurie, I have what is essentially a devoted listening room but it has a couple of fixed structures (let alone furnishings) that intrude and make it a rather asymmetric space and which leaves me with rather limited options for placement of each speaker. I used the rules in the Vandersteen owners manual as a start point (does cater to some degree for asymmetry) and then moved the speakers in small increments till I was pretty happy with what I was hearing; but I'm equally certain there is still scope for improvement. I guess the potential I'm seeing in this Master Set method is that it might well offer something towards improving my 'not strictly rectangular' room situation. What do you think?
Hi Dan,That's all fine if you want to buy all the needed stuff to do that measuring and etc. In fact, if it can be done on a real time basis this could be useful in instances where it's all a bit hard to hear things. But it's not really necessary as it can be done by ear.I've read the Cardas information and used to set my speakers up that way. However I find the Cardas information to be a bit random and with no explanation, let alone documentation, of the numbers as to what the numbers mean, or where they came from. A three decimal point number is pretty specific and should represent something, but there is nothing about that.The most important part of setting speakers in the room is where they sit in relation to each other so that each speaker pressurizes the room equally. This can get to be a rather long winded explanation that will likely only confuse, so I'll leave it.Master Set works on making each speaker equally pressurize the room making for a stable sound anywhere in the room. The Cardas method does not do this. Cardas is pretty easy to set up, just a tape and some arithmetic. Master Set is a bit difficult.With Master Set you can sit anywhere in the room with same sound. With Cardas there is a small sweet spot of a few inches only. Move from that and the sound changes.Oh, there is no real studied documentation on Master Set either. But it does do what it purports to set out and do. It works.Steve