Quad 2805 and room placement


I am interested in the 2805 but before I ask for a demo I would be grateful for advice on room placement.
I have a room about 23 feet square. A pillar restricts the listening area to about 2/3rds of this area, so the right hand speaker will be about 4 feet from the side wall and the left hand speaker roughly equidistant from the side walls.
I understand that distance from side walls does not greatly affect the Quad's performance. Am I right here?
A possible problem is, however, that I really cannot have the speakers more than 3 feet from the wall behind them. At present I have Linn Keltiks and have always had problems with "peaks" in the bass response in spite of adjusting the aktiv cards and the distance from the wall.
Will l have a similar problem with the Quads? Also, I don't really want damping material/curtaining behind the speakers.
Would be most interested to receive anyone's advice or comments.
If you can add advice on amplifiers (909,Quad 40 II or other) would be interested to hear it, though possibly I ought to start another thread for this question.
Regards
Brian
brianog

Showing 1 response by audiokinesis

First of all, congrats on your Quad purchase! I haven't heard the new models, but I've owned several pairs of Quads over the years, and like the new braced frame concept.

Distance to sidewalls is not critical with large panel dipoles, though generally you want them far enough apart to get good soundstage width.

Distance from the backwall is much more of an issue. You see, ideally you'd like to avoid a strong reflection arriving within say 10 milliseconds of the first-arrival sound. Three feet out will give you roughly 6 milliseconds delay before the reflected backwave reaches the listener. So I would recommend diffusion (not absorption) panels behind the speakers, offset towards the centerline of the room a bit, to intercept and diffuse that first reflection backwave energy at least in the midrange and upper frequencies.

In the bass region, dipoles behave very differently from monopoles. You see, its the out-of-phase backwave that will be getting the benefit of boundary reinforcement off the nearby "front" wall. So moving them close to the wall will result in greater cancellation of the frontwave, and actually decrease the bass at the listening position. If too much bass is lost, you might try putting a couple of bass traps in the corners behind the speakers, as this will help to soak up some of that out-of-phase backwave energy so that there will be less cancellation of the frontwave.

Best of luck to you,

Duke