Anonymous I have been Selling, and designing systems for over thirty years and have what I think mastered the Art of speaker placement
What do you sell and design? What is the name of your store and products?
Do not try placing speakers with room acoustical treatment in the room!
Not true. You should not try cure the effect of standing waves with speaker placement. Standing waves are the consequence of room modes, totally independent of your speaker placement.
Treat the standing wave and place speakers were the manufacturer recommends. Placing acoustical treatment and final speaker placement is an overlapping process.
Just leave what furniture you have to use in the room and thats all.
Furniture is acoustical treatment. So you do place speaker after some treatment after all.
I usually start with the 1/3 rule for starters
Really? Speaker manufacturers dont say that. Eds (Hornshoppe) horns have to be placed in the corners, irrespective of how big your room is. Ditto for Klipsch corner horns.
How about bookshelf speakers? Are you going to start of placing them 10 from the rear wall in a 30 room? Wouldnt it be better to place them where the manufacturer recommends and then fine-tune? Youll get them set up a lot faster by following manufacturers recommendation to get you into the ballpark.
Then at that point you can add your acoustical treatment to fine tune the end result.
Really? So when newly placed bass traps reduce standing waves and as a result your bass becomes too loud (or soft), you should not move your speakers? I did.
I notice you post anonymously rather than using your registered name. I assume you are registered since you said you have been selling and designing hi-fi for 30 years. Why do you post anonymously?
Regards
Paul
What do you sell and design? What is the name of your store and products?
Do not try placing speakers with room acoustical treatment in the room!
Not true. You should not try cure the effect of standing waves with speaker placement. Standing waves are the consequence of room modes, totally independent of your speaker placement.
Treat the standing wave and place speakers were the manufacturer recommends. Placing acoustical treatment and final speaker placement is an overlapping process.
Just leave what furniture you have to use in the room and thats all.
Furniture is acoustical treatment. So you do place speaker after some treatment after all.
I usually start with the 1/3 rule for starters
Really? Speaker manufacturers dont say that. Eds (Hornshoppe) horns have to be placed in the corners, irrespective of how big your room is. Ditto for Klipsch corner horns.
How about bookshelf speakers? Are you going to start of placing them 10 from the rear wall in a 30 room? Wouldnt it be better to place them where the manufacturer recommends and then fine-tune? Youll get them set up a lot faster by following manufacturers recommendation to get you into the ballpark.
Then at that point you can add your acoustical treatment to fine tune the end result.
Really? So when newly placed bass traps reduce standing waves and as a result your bass becomes too loud (or soft), you should not move your speakers? I did.
I notice you post anonymously rather than using your registered name. I assume you are registered since you said you have been selling and designing hi-fi for 30 years. Why do you post anonymously?
Regards
Paul