A grouch? Omigod, stvnharr, if you call me that again I'm gonna tell your mom you're being mean to me. Besides, I think I've cracked your code....when you say master set you really are saying masterbate. That would explain your enthusiasm. And your insistence on hands on experimentation. And don't send me anymore prissy P.M.s. I won't respond.
The graph is essentially meaningless as it was not done in a Master Set setup. Just having speakers close to a wall does not make a speaker placement a Master Set. It's just another out of phase placement.
Steve,I want to thank you for taking the time and space in this thread to explain master set to the best of your ability. I had never heard of it before and even though I think I am already doing the master set without knowing it, I have a new way of looking at things and a new way to evaluate speaker placement. Whether it works for me or not I appreciate the source of information.
I come here to learn and to share ideas about audio. And for a little companionship. Thanks to everyone else who has had something constructive to say on the subject of speaker placement. I will follow the thread with continued interest.
Two things1) On the subject of placing loudspeakers near boundaries: placing any box speaker, dipole or omni-directional speaker near a boundary will cause phase interference (aka speaker boundary interference). In addition it will cause low frequency gain (aka boundary gain), typically 3db for each boundary. Some speaker designers factor this into their designs, others do not. The only speaker designs to avoid boundary interference are either highly directional (e.g. horns) or in wall. A box speaker is basically omni directional at low frequencies.read this article http://www.synaudcon.com/website08/VOL36_DEC08_Boundaries.pdf2) A good and simple way to score sound is against the Home Acoustics Alliance checklist (Focus, Envelopment, Clarity, Response and Dynamics).
"It's just another out of phase placement"
Correct!When speakers are placed very close to a boundary, very close as in a foot or so, the whole wall becomes like the baffle. This can be included as part of the design of the speaker, if the designer so decides.In doing the MS protocall, one moves one speaker out from the wall until the sound of the speaker is decoupled from the wall. This is easily heard as the sound all seems to come from that one speaker. This will happen at different distances with different speakers. It's not a fixed dimensional measurement. And the decoupling happens fairly close to the wall, closer than conventional thought allows.Sumiko has done a lot of research on room boundary effects, and has kept it all inhouse. Pity really, but it's there's to do as they please.
It's good to have a sense of humor! Glad to have contributed!My comment refers the placement on one speaker with in regards to the other one. Any competent speaker should designed to be phase correct with respect to the drivers in that one speaker. But the placement of the two speakers in the room also needs to be phase correct with each other for maximum sound benefit. This is what M.A.S.TE.R.S. is about, and the Master Set protocall is a way of getting there.In that respect it is quite different from common thought, and maybe a hard concept to grasp. It's a lot easier to understand by hearing, than reading about it.
If this is as you say then one should be able to measure this effect. Will this effect be measurable with dipoles or only with box speakers? If dipoles I can do some measurements to see whether this is true, if not then maybe someone with a box speaker can try. If this MS theory is correct one should not be able to see phase interference is what you are saying. Correct?