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As you walk around the room, does the bass energy change? louder and or/softer?sometimes adjusting your chair/listening position can fix the problem, but bass trapping is a good idea as well.
The walls should always have "better" bass, since the room modes terminate there. You can do the same thing with the speakers -- put them closer to the wall and the "boundary effect" should make the bass louder. Imaging tends to suffer with this, though.
I'm definitely aware of the boundary phenomenon. I was simply stating where I can hear the bass. I'd love to find a position that allows good bass and the remarkable imaging I have now. Moving these Totems nearer to the rear wall does not change what I hear. It only slightly improves, but degrades the depth of the soundstage.
What amp do you have?I think the Manis are notorious power-hounds, no?
I would recommend starting by placing your seating somewhere between 7 and 8' from ears to the wall behind you. That gets you out of serious peaks/nulls/buildup. At the same 8' distance to the speakers, that also pushes them back slightly to give better reinforcement from the front boundary without sacrificing a ton of imaging qualities. I've always loved the Mani-II's. Great little speaker though seriously power hungry.So if the dealers room is very similar to yours, what is different? Might be a good place to start the hunt...Bryan
I'm not saying you can't make improvements by possibly getting some more boundary reinforcement. You're just not going to get the same type of room filling bass that he does since you're trying to fill a space 3x or more as large effectively.Doors would certainly go a long way to help.Curtains aren't going to impact bass response at all - only suck all of the high frequencies out of the room.Bryan