>I did not make any treatments.The speakers are placed 5ft.(1.5m) away from the side walls and 1.3ft.(0.4m) in front of back walls with 6.5 ft.(2m) distance between them. I find the bass to boomy for my tastes.
As expected. You're going to pickup substantial gain below 110Hz plus whatever you get due to the listener's rear-wall proximity which is also shorter than optimal.
A short-wall placement with the same speaker separation would make things better.
If you can't do that, a shelving high-pass filter would be a fine idea.
Some speakers (Revel makes a few) have a boundary switch which does this.
>What do you consider that should be more appropriate for my room , a bookshelf or a floorstander?
In-wall. Your speakers aren't far enough off the front wall (about 5') for their front-wall reflections to be perceived entirely as reverberant field, aren't far enough out to develop sound stage depth that you'd loose by going with in-walls, and moving to in-wall speakers will eliminate baffle diffraction effects.
Note that by 'in-wall' I mean speakers with well-braced high quality enclosures that mount in the walls (Triad?), not decorator approved units which rely on the resonant dry-wall cavity.
As expected. You're going to pickup substantial gain below 110Hz plus whatever you get due to the listener's rear-wall proximity which is also shorter than optimal.
A short-wall placement with the same speaker separation would make things better.
If you can't do that, a shelving high-pass filter would be a fine idea.
Some speakers (Revel makes a few) have a boundary switch which does this.
>What do you consider that should be more appropriate for my room , a bookshelf or a floorstander?
In-wall. Your speakers aren't far enough off the front wall (about 5') for their front-wall reflections to be perceived entirely as reverberant field, aren't far enough out to develop sound stage depth that you'd loose by going with in-walls, and moving to in-wall speakers will eliminate baffle diffraction effects.
Note that by 'in-wall' I mean speakers with well-braced high quality enclosures that mount in the walls (Triad?), not decorator approved units which rely on the resonant dry-wall cavity.