When it comes to audiophilia we all live in a remote area.
So are you getting any bass boom? That is the issue with too close to the wall placement. You have an OK size room for typical residential environments.
You could get a very good placment on the short wall at 14 ft. Even the touchiest speakers do not want more than 8 ft of separation. Even that puts them 3 ft from the side walls. If you use the Cardas Golden Mean placement you would be even further from side walls, but several feet from the wall behind the speakers ---pretty much requiring the short wall placement.
If you used the short wall could you come well out into the room? That would put your listening position the same distance as from the wall behind with an equalatrial triangle configuration. Somewhere between 6 1/2 to 7ft. So you would be sitting about 13 ft into the 24 ft length of the room.
Then you probably will tame all room resonances and may be able to get away without acoustic treatment products. Though some treatment, even with furnishings, will no doubt make an improvement.
I personally would not get into modifying any componants. It wipes out resale value which can be crucial to the upgrade process with preowned products.
Bi wiring is proven to improve performance. When you can separate the very low freqencies from the mid-highs you get get better performance from cables as well as speakers. But it is a function of the speakers and the amp primarily. Do it if you can, or if you can upgrade components to make it possible as a function of the upgraded componant.
But I would definately not modfidy anything. Use the expenditure for an upgrade instead, which will hold its value if well cared for, and properly used.
There is a lot of mistuque and misperception in the marketplace of audio components. The heart of a system is the speakers. Get a pair you like that are appropriate to your room and budget. Then with the unlimitless choices of components that will appropriately support them, go for price, availability, and aesthetics, or perhaps evem build quality.
Least important are the infinate subtilties -----of cables. Use cables appropriate to the system and appreciate that the source material you are listening to is a much more crucial concern.
The market is flooded with sub standard mid-fi at best product. Try to find some excellently produced CD's. At least for a reference to get your system set up, and to train your ears to know the difference.
The only place I know of that lists anything close to real live sonics is at: < http://www.linkwitzlab.com/music.htm >
There is nothing to buy there, though a wealth of useful knowledge about the real world of audio excellence, but get at least a couple of CD's to begin with. You will know what to do after you hear them a few times :-)
In conclusion, Speakers first, then placement, and any needed room treatment, along with some legitimate source material. Then components, follwed by cables and tweaks. Anything else is chaos and therefore futile, frustrating, and needlessly expensive.
'If you do know where you are going, you will probably end up some place else.'
So are you getting any bass boom? That is the issue with too close to the wall placement. You have an OK size room for typical residential environments.
You could get a very good placment on the short wall at 14 ft. Even the touchiest speakers do not want more than 8 ft of separation. Even that puts them 3 ft from the side walls. If you use the Cardas Golden Mean placement
If you used the short wall could you come well out into the room? That would put your listening position the same distance as from the wall behind with an equalatrial triangle configuration. Somewhere between 6 1/2 to 7ft. So you would be sitting about 13 ft into the 24 ft length of the room.
Then you probably will tame all room resonances and may be able to get away without acoustic treatment products. Though some treatment, even with furnishings, will no doubt make an improvement.
I personally would not get into modifying any componants. It wipes out resale value which can be crucial to the upgrade process with preowned products.
Bi wiring is proven to improve performance. When you can separate the very low freqencies from the mid-highs you get get better performance from cables as well as speakers. But it is a function of the speakers and the amp primarily. Do it if you can, or if you can upgrade components to make it possible as a function of the upgraded componant.
But I would definately not modfidy anything. Use the expenditure for an upgrade instead, which will hold its value if well cared for, and properly used.
There is a lot of mistuque and misperception in the marketplace of audio components. The heart of a system is the speakers. Get a pair you like that are appropriate to your room and budget. Then with the unlimitless choices of components that will appropriately support them, go for price, availability, and aesthetics, or perhaps evem build quality.
Least important are the infinate subtilties -----of cables. Use cables appropriate to the system and appreciate that the source material you are listening to is a much more crucial concern.
The market is flooded with sub standard mid-fi at best product. Try to find some excellently produced CD's. At least for a reference to get your system set up, and to train your ears to know the difference.
The only place I know of that lists anything close to real live sonics is at: < http://www.linkwitzlab.com/music.htm >
There is nothing to buy there, though a wealth of useful knowledge about the real world of audio excellence, but get at least a couple of CD's to begin with. You will know what to do after you hear them a few times :-)
In conclusion, Speakers first, then placement, and any needed room treatment, along with some legitimate source material. Then components, follwed by cables and tweaks. Anything else is chaos and therefore futile, frustrating, and needlessly expensive.
'If you do know where you are going, you will probably end up some place else.'