Putting speakers next to other speakers


I have two systems, The main one at home which has B&W 800d3s, and the "less expensive" in my office (smallish) basement has Proac d100's. I am pretty sure my favourite speakers are the Proacs, but they are 200 miles away and will take some hefty lifting to bring home. My aim would be to put them both side by side at home and just swap speaker cables from time to time to test and then decide which set up to persevere with.
Yes I know it is frowned upon ... cross vibration etc etc ... in theory .. but IN PRACTICE can this work? The Proacs are big and are very close to my basement wall but sound great. From a layman's point of view what is difference between a wall and close speaker? I reckon in practice all will be ok - but it is an experiment that will take significant lugging around and swearing! Not something lightly undertaken.
I am not looking for technical reasons why I am doomed to failure .. I can read enough of that already. I am looking for the real world good news ACTUAL experiences which defy gloomy theorists. Both speakers are built as heavy as sin .. so should just be normal "room obstacles" that we have to cope with in a living room.
tatyana69

Showing 2 responses by millercarbon

Okay technically you can put speakers next to speakers just fine. What you can't do is put cables next to anti-cables. They will annihilate each other.

Sorry, but I'm eager to see the postometer roll over 3000 and the quality is suffering.
I am looking for the real world good news ACTUAL experiences which defy gloomy theorists.


Replace "gloomy theorists" with "experienced factualists" and you begin to get a feel for the answer. 

If you have two speakers that sound very different then you should have a good enough idea to not need to go to the effort. You'll just go with the better sounding pair. 

But if they are close enough you're willing to do the work, then do the work. What you seem to be saying is you're willing to do 90% of the work, getting them into the same room, but not the last 10% that will make the other 90% worth the effort.

Mull that one over. Your answer is in there. Trust me.