HOW TO POSITION 2 PAIRS OF SPEAKER FOR ALTERNATE LISTENING


HOW TO POSITION 2 PAIRS OF SPEAKER FOR ALTERNATE LISTENING

Is there a way we can position 2 pairs of speakers next to, or close to each other for alternate listening (without having to move anything over and over) but not compensate the sound qualities / acoustic benefits too much?
infinity_audio
i have 4 bose 901 speakers i bought back in 1971. at that time bose had a system that was called 'the super bose system' anyway you would have the 2 speakers up front and the other 2 on both sides to bring the soundstage out.to the left and right.
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I have to give you an answer you won’t like, but such is life. If you want a True, accurate sound comparison anything done to keep the speakers in the same room at the same time simply for convenience is a compromise therefore you will not get a true comparison. It’s a pain in the derriere but you must move one pair of speakers out of the room and set up the other pair properly, listen to them, get accustomed to them, take them out and do the same with the second pair. Never Promised You a Rose Garden. Sometimes this hobby sucks but there it is. I will add one caveat if you're not dealing with a critical listening pair of speakers or system and it is not that important to you to have a true accurate comparison in it and it's just background music then who cares probably doesn't matter a bit. you didn't mention the type of speakers or system you were using so all this maybe for not. Just saying.
There was a similar suspicion that telephones and cell phones “resonated” when in the same room with a speaker demo, but that turned out to be something more uh, unspeakable. I.e., it not (rpt not) the tiny telephone or cell phone speaker that was responsible for hurting the sound, but something completely out of the blue and, frankly, a little scary. 😬
@geoffkait  - Perhaps the OP needs a $2/2" digital special clock ?  To work on the timing of the system resonances ??