If you would just bring the speakers up to the front edge of the desk, you will drop 3db of boundary loading off of the bass response and also reduce the rear port loading off the rear wall. This will probably clear most or all of the problem up for you.
Recessed/Weak Midrange Problem -- Help
I have a pair of rear-ported Soliloquy 5.0s that I just installed in my office with a Rega system (Brio + Planet). The speakers are on top of a sort of side desk against the wall (the desk is hollow underneath). The rear of the speakers is roughly 6 inches from the wall. Due to space constraints that's where they gotta stay.
The problem is that with this scenario the midrange seems to be recessed, or weak, in comparison to the bass. Treble seems OK. The midrange just seems to be drowning. Neil Young sounds like he's way far off, or just singing softly, but the instruments are up front. I've had these speakers in another set up and they were fine.
Is the rear-porting the problem? If so, can I reduce this? Am I just hearing a limitation of some component in the system. The Rega components are supposed to excel in the midrange. Any thoughts? Should I consider another small speaker that is not rea-ported (nor bright!)? Will adding some granite under the speakers help (no room for stands)? Thanks!
The problem is that with this scenario the midrange seems to be recessed, or weak, in comparison to the bass. Treble seems OK. The midrange just seems to be drowning. Neil Young sounds like he's way far off, or just singing softly, but the instruments are up front. I've had these speakers in another set up and they were fine.
Is the rear-porting the problem? If so, can I reduce this? Am I just hearing a limitation of some component in the system. The Rega components are supposed to excel in the midrange. Any thoughts? Should I consider another small speaker that is not rea-ported (nor bright!)? Will adding some granite under the speakers help (no room for stands)? Thanks!
5 responses Add your response