It was surprising how high the tweeter was aiming when I checked it by placing a laser "tape measure" flat against the tweeter surround and noting where the light hit a target at the listening position. To get my head up there I'd have to sit in a booster seat on a tall barstool! I have probably not ever done that because my kiester won't fit in a baby seat these days, and they didn't have baby booster seats back when I was a baby, so I sat on my mom's lap on the barstool back then. But sitting on my mom's lap would be impractical in my listening room now. Hence the tilting experiment.
In any case, the spikes aren't sufficiently adjustable to tilt the speakers as far as I needed to tilt them. But I haven't yet put the spikes on anyway. So for starters I just placed a 3/4 inch board under the rear feet of the speakers. As a semi-permanent solution I will ask a local machine shop to make some threaded plugs of various lengths to screw into the feet where the spikes otherwise go. If I ever settle on speaker position and a final tilt angle I'll have some short spikes made for the front.
I most definitely appreciate those features of the Andra IIs that you mention, imaging and soundstaging. Bass is spectacular now that my room is fairly stuffed with fiberglass broadband absorbers. Overall the Andra IIs are excellent, but perhaps just a tad dark as you say, particularly for those of us suffering the ravages of time. Not bad at all, I agree (or else I'd definitely have something different by now). If this tilting trick stands the test of time, I might consider my system sufficiently well balanced and maybe even stop buying things for a while!
In any case, the spikes aren't sufficiently adjustable to tilt the speakers as far as I needed to tilt them. But I haven't yet put the spikes on anyway. So for starters I just placed a 3/4 inch board under the rear feet of the speakers. As a semi-permanent solution I will ask a local machine shop to make some threaded plugs of various lengths to screw into the feet where the spikes otherwise go. If I ever settle on speaker position and a final tilt angle I'll have some short spikes made for the front.
I most definitely appreciate those features of the Andra IIs that you mention, imaging and soundstaging. Bass is spectacular now that my room is fairly stuffed with fiberglass broadband absorbers. Overall the Andra IIs are excellent, but perhaps just a tad dark as you say, particularly for those of us suffering the ravages of time. Not bad at all, I agree (or else I'd definitely have something different by now). If this tilting trick stands the test of time, I might consider my system sufficiently well balanced and maybe even stop buying things for a while!