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I was in Colorado over the Christmas holidays and stopped in to see Rod Thomson, owner of Soundings Hi Fi in Denver. I would call Rod a Master Set expert. I spent a few hours visiting with Rod about Master Set, the theory, etc, and then listened to some music from a set of Vienna Acoustic speakers that had been "Master Set." The sound was wonderful and as Steve has posted, I could move around the room and the sound stayed focused with a very wide sweet spot and excellent imaging, detail, bass extension, focused midrange and smooth highs. A very non-fatiguing sound.After I returned home, I have experimented with my speaker location using some of the ideas/suggestions from my discussions with Rod. I moved my speakers a little farther apart and closer to the front wall behind the speakers. They are about 44.5" from the side walls to center of the woofer (Cardas was 56.25); the left speaker is 57.5" and the right speaker is 59.5" from the front of the woofers to the wall behind the speakers; the speakers are 116.5" apart (center of woofer to center of woofer); and I sit about 144" from the speakers. I picked up some bass slam and extension that I had lost by having the speakers farther out into the room. The current location is throwing a nice wide soundstage with focused imaging that stays centered no matter where I sit on my couch. It is very easy to close my eyes and get lost in the music. I like this speaker location better than when I used the Cardas calculator, but I am interested finding out what a Master Set will produce. Since Rod is willing to travel, I am going to use some airline miles and fly him to Spokane to do a Master Set later this winter. Laura
I was in Colorado over the Christmas holidays and stopped in to see Rod Tomson.......After I returned home, I have experimented with my speaker location using some of the ideas/suggestions from my discussions with Rod. ........Laura
I was in Colorado over the Christmas holidays and stopped in to see Rod Tomson, owner of Soundings Hi Fi in Denver. I would call Rod a Master Set expert. I spent a few hours visiting with Rod about Master Set, the theory, etc, and then listened to some music from a set of Vienna Acoustic speakers that had been "Master Set." The sound was wonderful and as Steve has posted, I could move around the room and the sound stayed focused with a very wide sweet spot and excellent imaging, detail, bass extension, focused midrange and smooth highs. A very non-fatiguing sound.After I returned home, I have experimented with my speaker location using some of the ideas/suggestions from my discussions with Rod. I moved my speakers a little farther apart and closer to the front wall behind the speakers. They are about 44.5" from the side walls to center of the woofer (Cardas was 56.25); the left speaker is 57.5" and the right speaker is 59.5" from the front of the woofers to the wall behind the speakers; the speakers are 116.5" apart (center of woofer to center of woofer); and I sit about 144" from the speakers. I picked up some bass slam and extension that I had lost by having the speakers farther out into the room. The current location is throwing a nice wide soundstage with focused imaging that stays centered no matter where I sit on my couch. It is very easy to close my eyes and get lost in the music. I like this speaker location better than when I used the Cardas calculator, but I am interested finding out what a Master Set will produce. Since Rod is willing to travel, I am going to use some airline miles and fly him to Spokane to do a Master Set later this winter. Laura
Would any of those suggestions help the rest of us or were they specific to your situation?
Laura, didn't the speakers disappear and allow you to get lost in the music as well with the Cardas placement?
I can see how the soundstage would come across as wider by spreading the speakers apart. But I've found that can mean a sacrifice of tone and dynamics and room energy. And funny enough I find speakers can beam more the wider they are apart. I guess that's not a rule of thumb though.
As tempting as MS sounds, I don't think I'll try it. I think dipoles need not apply. They need to be well out in the room and Cardas has nailed the position with his dipole calculator. If I had cones I'd certainly give it a try.
I would rank great AC power right up there with acoustics on my own personal "importance" ranking scale, but you need the decent acoustics to realize all that it has to offer. You need the acoustics well done to realize the best benefits of anything really.Bryan
Rod also thought I might need a sub or two given the size of my room.
Laura, an example/graph of what can happen with close wall placement of a person's main speakers submitted by jhm731 appears above. I'm bettin your speaks are as flat as they were designed to be at 56" off the wall behind . You know that I think you should experiment with your triangle (i.e. bringing your speaks closer together and your seat nearer the apex of an equilateral triangle with play with toe-in).
Jim- I'd keep the speakers the same distance off the back wall and try moving them closer to the side walls, along with changing the listening position.
Until some MS user posts some room measurements, IMO, it's just an amusing low bass boost.
How do you measure personal preference?
You might find that you have better than subwoofer bass when you move your speakers closer yet to the wall behind them. It's amazing how much deep bass a single eight inch woofer can produce. You have four of them .
But I do believe that all system and room combinations have their own individual signatures and experimentation is the key.