I think there are different types of reproduction in a listening room. You can have an open sound that fills the room and recreates the experience of actually sitting in the venue or you can have a more focused more detailed sound that draws you into a recording but sounds like you are listening to a recording. I think speaker placement is the major factor in determining which one of these you experience.
Well, sitting in a venue often does not yield the detail provided by listening to a recording.
Would love to have a go at the method somewhat apprehensive how it might fare with the Maggies though.Maggies spiked 'Anchor Stands' don’t readily encourage the time consuming effort involved.Certainly worth experimenting I suppose, isn’t this the sort of thing that audiophiles engage in?Anyone with Planars have any success?
The space is an irregular 27x28x7.5 with a five foot wide concrete support to ceiling in center of room that challenges the Almighty Himself.LF absorbers throughout the entire space are a must here, the other end of the room is the HT for good measure which makes for a double whammy.The Cardas if memory serves places left speaker at 7’.6” from side wall / 4’7” from front wall, the distance from side wall would put me at the concrete support, definitely not an option.Maggie’s at present are 4’ from front wall and 3’ from side wall.I’ve experimented without LF absorbers in front wall with speakers out to 5’ from front wall; difference been minute at best while forcing a near field listening position which I don’t appreciate.Front wall is still a work in progress and it may still end up with a combination of absorbers and diffusion.As is, the stage is wide and highly focused low level information is conveyed clearly and once in a while some recordings still offer a surprise or two. Now, if the ‘Masterset’ was capable of expanding the sweet spot sans issues with the Maggie’s this would be a real bonus.Certainly be nice if someone would chime in with dipole impressions. Furniture sliders are a good idea, will eventually give this a whirl on a good day
...I used to work with Rodney years ago and he was certainly the least audiophile of any of us. In fact, character that he is, he used to laugh at us for our concerns and suggest off road motorcycling which is what he was very good at. He's an entertainer at the level of Seinfeld or Leno and a world class salesman. And he knows enough to sell whatever people are dumb enough to buy.
Rod Tomson from Soundings in Denver is coming to Spokane Feb 12-13 to set my speakers using the Master Set technique. If any of you are in the area or are interested in watching/listening as Rod sets the speakers, send me a PM and I'll tell you how to find my house. I will, of course, report back and give you my impressions.Laura
Sorry, been away so missed your thread.Yes I fully subscribe to the Cardas geometric recipes. My room follows in equations (8 ft x 13 ft x 21 ft) and the layout follows his nearfield setup recommendations. My equipment/rack are rather minimal (good for not messing with the soundstage) and my speakers are single driver designs (for the utmost in coherency and imaging) in mass loaded transmission lines (that go low with slow roll off balancing off with the room gain). I use digital equalization to even out speaker/room response and also have six GIK 244 high density fiberglass absorption panels located at the front corners and front/side wall first reflection points). Sitting in the chair is magical, even for the uninitiated.
Stevie- Oh, man, you're slaying me . . what speaker distortion would that me? And you hiding or obscuring it, or removing it? Do you know? And you can do the same thing you're sayin in sentence three by just moving your seat (if you have your speakers in a symmetrical and neutral position to begin with)! Right, not everybody can do that. Stereo image . . that what it's all about? Nah, just an over simplification, right? You can do better than that .