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SteveI don't understand why movements of 1/4" could affect 'nodes'. To really affect bass response you are talking more like feet than inches. Its simple physics.Nyal
Steve & TooManyToysI'm confused about MS.It seems that this setup wants your spkrs very close to the front wall. What about SBIR ?... especially if you do not have any absorption on the front wall ?
If I had to hazard a guess I reckon 80% or more of us have these sort of non-ideal rooms. L shaped, windows, openings, disparity in wall construction, blah blah. Its in these non-ideal rooms that I'm interested in comparing a no-measure just listen technique, to a measure using an RTA technique. I reckon some of the ideas in MS are interesting, particularly the one about not worrying about whether you are exactly the same distance from both loudspeakers. Stay tooned.
Quote from: Nyal Mellor on 23 Dec 2009, 04:47 amIf I had to hazard a guess I reckon 80% or more of us have these sort of non-ideal rooms. L shaped, windows, openings, disparity in wall construction, blah blah. Its in these non-ideal rooms that I'm interested in comparing a no-measure just listen technique, to a measure using an RTA technique. I reckon some of the ideas in MS are interesting, particularly the one about not worrying about whether you are exactly the same distance from both loudspeakers. Stay tooned.Nyal,This is much of the beauty of Master Set in that it allows great sound from most any room. In fact rooms with openings are said to be quite good as they let the sound out of the room rather than keeping it in the room to endlessly bounce all around.Also, the primary tenet of Master Set is that the sound we hear from the speakers comes from the pressurization of the air by the speakers, which then moves the eardrum, which the ear-brain combo decyphers into music. The distance we are from the speakers is somewhat irrelevant.If you get a close Master Set setup, you can pretty much sit anywhere in the room. If you get a perfect Master Set, the clarity and realness of sound is stunning. The former is achievable, the latter is very very hard.Be interesting to hear how you go.Steve
I don't think the Cardas method gives the me the impression of pressurizing the room. Quite the opposite at my house. Holographic Soundstage? Oh yeah, a three dimensional wonderland. But anemic, weightless, and skeletal compared to the meat on the bone quality that I get when I use the room boundaries instead of avoid them.I will have to try the master set idea soon, although I have a hunch that I'm using it already, if not quite perfectly.
bmckenney,What I'm saying is that I used and enjoyed the Cardas method for many years with my two full range speakers. The speakers were way out into the room as the math dictates, and I was listening in the near field escaping the effect of the room walls (i.e. avoiding room boundaries). I was in soundstage heaven. But it got tiresome and threadbare after a while. Kind of like a special effect turned on all the time. No substance, just sonic trickery.Anyway, one day I went back to placing my speakers close to the rear wall and near the corners and I liked that sonic presentation much better. I'm not saying it is the right way to do it and the Cardas method is wrong. I'm just saying that I like the way that the room boundaries support the wave launch of the sound more than I enjoy the holographic effect. It took me a long time to find the best compromise between pressurizing the room and retaining most of the stereo imaging but I finally figured it out. Diffusers on the side walls, just next to and in front of each speaker, help to retain the soundstage and imaging. My opinion is that most of the stereo effect we hear from in recordings is not real anyway, so getting most but not all of it back is plenty for me.I hope that helps to explain my experience a little better .
I thought that speaker placement and bass response (part of energizing the room) was finding the spot away from both boundaries and there are different distances where bass response will be better than others, and it is not jus one distance.
I have decided to redo Cardas in my room over the next few days. Last time I had to make some compromises also to achieve the best of all... I want to start over but have a measuring question...My room is 173" (14' 5") wide from left wall to right wall. But at the speakers, the wall to the right is a series of four tall 12 pane windows and their woodwork. The windows are covered in heavy velvet curtains... If I measure the room width right in front of the speakers, the room is 178" (14'10") from left wall to the right window panes... So, the windows are inset another 5" from the woodwork and of course all behind the curtains.Do I use the 173" room width? The 178" room width? Or maybe even split the difference?Looking forward to starting fresh and tweaking from there again.Jason
Quote from: bmckenney on 24 Dec 2009, 02:29 am I thought that speaker placement and bass response (part of energizing the room) was finding the spot away from both boundaries and there are different distances where bass response will be better than others, and it is not jus one distance.Maybe that was spelled out somewhere and I missed it. It wouldn't be the first time that I have blown it . I thought they were trying to avoid the room and emulate the anechoic chamber. I could be totally wrong on this, it has been a while. I have a rectangular room with symetrical corners. The Cardas website has some specific instructions for a rectangular room that I followed. It says : "The distance from the center of the woofer face to the side walls is:Room Width times .276 (RW x .276)The distance from the center of the woofer face to the wall behind the speaker is:Room Width times .447 (RW x .447)This is all you need to know to place speakers in a symmetrical, rectangular room!"I did get a smooth response and terrific imaging. But it is comparitavely threadbare and anemic in the mid and low bass. It is deprived of liveliness and jump factor at my house. You're right about every room having its own issues though. Maybe something else is going on over here.I have to admit that my taste has really changed over the last few years. I like the idea of using the room boundaries to support the sound and be a part of the total sound that I hear. I also like speakers with wide baffles, which is totally improper these days. I have to close the blinds when the diffraction police drive by . It's hell getting old . . . .