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I do have a few questions, however. 1) Does the upgrade to the FST improve the width and/or height of the sweetspot significantly? (I'm guessing perhaps the width, but probably not the height.)
2) Does the narrower baffle on the RM30M improve the width of the sweetspot significantly?
3) How sensitive are the RM30s in terms of room placement when compared to the RM40s? I've read that they aren't as picky regarding the back wall, but what about the side walls and spread between speakers/listener?
what about the side walls and spread between speakers/listener?
Any speakers I finally purchase could be placed along a short or long wall in a large living room - 18'4" x 14'9" x 12' - that then connects to an open dining area and kitchen on one side and foyer on the other. The short wall is much more convenient, but the long wall has the adjoining rooms off to either side and a more symmetrical "view" of the listening room itself.
Most any new VMPS speaker you get will come with the FST Tweeter. I have found that when new, the vertical focal range of this driver is very narrow, but that it widens over time. My speakers are coming up on 4 months now, and the difference in sound quality between the sitting and standing positions has dwindled to very little.
Speaker placement is a bit more difficult. There are just too many variables for me to give you any specific advice. But I can give you some general advice. First and foremost, these speakers are like women, they do not like to be stuck out of the way in the corner.
They like to be standing out in the room, away from the corners. You can use a wall for bass reinforcement, but a corner will give you imaging trouble.
Do not place the speakers too far apart, 8 feet seems to be about the max, I have no idea what the min is. Do not toe them in more than about 20 degrees. They do not have to be symetrically aligned, and may even sound better if they aren't, especially if the room is not symetrical. Let them break in for 3 to 4 months before doing any final tuning.
The FST tweeter "slightly" increases both horizontal and vertical dsipersion, but not enought to degrade the imaging.
A narrower baffle will reduce what is called "baffle gain" or refraction. The effect of reflected/refracted sonic energy from the VMPS speakers is generally much smaller than conventional drivers because ribbons tend to have "less" dispersion and subsequently a more focused image.All speakers have dispersion, but the characteristics are what set them apart. The reduction of "baffle gain" is one of the properties that actually "reduces" sonic spread or dispersion. What it does is "improve" the "blackness" between instruments and performers, by not "fuzzing out" the sonic image.Increasing the "sweet spot" on the other hand can only be accomplished by "increasing" the dilution of the signal. But doing so will also "reduce" the precision of the image. That is, a more dispersed (diluted) signal will have less blackness, and less definition.
To achieve a wider sweet spot with the RM40s or RM30s you need to set them up to be "forward cross firing". That is they are converged 1-3 feet in front of your listening position.This convergence will put you "off axis" and will require a slightly higher pot setting (up to 1-2 hours more)What this does, is set up a listening signal balance so that as you move to the left you get further away from the right speaker, but more "off axis" to the left speaker. This maintains the "balanced volume" of both more equally and creates a slightly wider sweet spot. Same thing happens when moving to the right.
Quote from: brj3) How sensitive are the RM30s in terms of room placement when compared to the RM40s? I've read that they aren't as picky regarding the back wall, but what about the side walls and spread between speakers/listener?There are two main differences between the two as far as room interaction.1) The baffle width2) The woofer arrangementDue to depth of both speakers, they both are well away from the front wall even with small offsets (1-2 feet)The side wall interaction might be more of a concern depending on toe in (convergence angle) and distance from the side wall.The side firing woofer of the RM30 will likely be augmented with a closer sidewall placement, but I have not had any reports of negative affects of closer placement.The woofer arrangement of the RM40 can work well with close sidewall set up but each room and set up will very.
Quote from: brjwhat about the side walls and spread between speakers/listener?With proper convergence angle, the width placement flexibility of both speakers is quite large. With a well treated front wall, you can have a "very" flat triangle and still have a very deep and well formed soundstage.In fact it is very much like wearing headphones...except you have the soundstage in front of you, not between your ears.
Quote from: brjAny speakers I finally purchase could be placed along a short or long wall in a large living room - 18'4" x 14'9" x 12' - that then connects to an open dining area and kitchen on one side and foyer on the other. The short wall is much more convenient, but the long wall has the adjoining rooms off to either side and a more symmetrical "view" of the listening room itself.I am a "Long wall" (no sidewall first reflections) advocate, with nearfield listening, but my listening preferences include, "soundstage, imaging, and depth" at the top of the list.
However, I would think that, for two drivers that radiate signals of equal quality, the driver that radiates the signal over a wider area (or perhaps arc) would create the wider sweet spot. (Of course, to generate the same SPL at any given point, the "wide area/arc" driver would require more power.)
Ahhhh.... this sounds like an interesting technique to try. The question is, why the pot adjustment? My reasoning: The bass drivers spread signal over a wider area than the mids/tweeters. Thus, when converging 1-3 feet in front of the listener, the listener is still within the primary arc of the bass output, but just outside that of the primary mid/tweeter output - which will now appear too soft in volume as a result. Increasing the mid/tweeter pots restores the balance between the on-axis bass output and the slightly off-axis mid/tweeter output. The catch, however, is that as you move outside the (now slightly enlarged) sweetspot, you will enter a region where the mid/tweeters actually appear more prominant that the bass. This concept doesn't seem like it would be particularly unique to VMPS speakers, or even ribbon speakers. Is there a catch somewhere that I haven't seen that would explain why it isn't more commonly discussed? (Of course, I could just be reading the wrong sources...)
By "flat" do you mean a triangle with the long distance between left and right speakers, or the long distance between the speaker plane and the listener?
John Casler wrote: I am a "Long wall" (no sidewall first reflections) advocate, with nearfield listening, but my listening preferences include, "soundstage, imaging, and depth" at the top of the list. brj wrote:I have to admit that I am starting to find my preferences heading that way. However, I want my guests to experience the same thing without having to give up my own seat in the sweetspot!
John,I had the Gallo Nucleus Reference speakers for almost 5 years and I can say that thye did disappear like no other speaker I have owned...they had a few significant faults:1. The tweeter and the conventional woofers didn't blend seemlessly.2. The speakers although punchy, couldn't really move enough air.3. Much more sensitive to room placement than the 40's.I loved these speakers and haven't owned another pair of speakers for as long a period of time, but I wouldn't go back to them (the 40's really are pretty darn good).George