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Unfortunatly, the room is by far the most important. If I was building a dedicated room for my system, I would build the listening room about 20x20 with a 30 foot high ceiling of glass windows and the floor of stone. I put together a lot of systems back in the 80's and that was by far one of the best I ever heard. Not the best, the better one was in a million dollar home.In that 20x20 room, the system was backed next to a solid wall with a very wide doorway going into another room. The owner had some fairly large 3-way dynamic speakers called Goetz and a Revox receiver. It was highly reflective surface everywhere. The imaging and soundstage was top-notch, no signs of hardness. I have heard several $100,000+ systems that was not near as good because of the room they were in. That room was probably $95,000 to build and the owner had $5000 into his system. I was shocked to day the least.People tend to over-damp their room. Carnegie Hall with high reflective surfaces everywhere sounds much better than the Avery Fisher Hall that was way over-damped and over designed.
You can fix a room, but not speakers.
Great point. A pair of speakers are constant. Speakers sound different in different rooms which is why IMO the room is more important. I've added bass traps and absorption to my room recently and my room is close to sounding (with the help of treatment) as good as it will sound. The sound of my system is changing but the only thing I've changed is my room.
^^that. ive read reviews over and over again of speakers I will never get the privilege to play even once, that sound terrible because of the room not the speaker. almost every time a major audio show happens we all get reminded of how much the room matters, and the subsequent lack-luster performance that follows from industry staples that still make quality products. if 70k speakers sound bad because of a room, Ill take a room first......
Using that logic, you might as well go buy yourself a set of Bose speakers and spend all your money on room treatment, lots & lots of room treatments. You polish that turd up real purty now, ya'hear. Cheers,Robin
All the fun is in getting there anyway. That's why, once we achieve our goals in this hobby, we start looking for new problems to overcome. Don't make a religion out of hi-fi. If you do, we won't be allowed to talk about it.
So I don't believe that you can provide a simple answer to this question.