Speaker - Room/size dilemma


Need some advice. Like many other (married) folks here, I'm trying to find a reasonable balance between room esthetics and sound quality. We listen to music in our living room. It's a 16'X18' room with a two-story ceiling that is almost 20' high. So the room is basically a large cube. The other challenge is the speakers need to be placed along the18' wall, roughly a foot or two away front the side and the back walls, basically near the corners since we have a fireplace in the middle of that wall. The couch will be about 15' away from the speakers. All in all, the speakers and the main listening position form a 15' equilateral triangle. I guess I'll need  to look for high dispersion speakers with good off-axis sound quality. Almost the opposite of what I have in there now which are ML Aerius i speakers. I still have the pair of Definitive Technologies BP20 speakers which I had originally purchased for this room and I think they better fit that application but I really prefer the clarity and focus of the MLs albeit with a much more constrained sweet spot. The MLs are being driven by a McIntosh MC2200 and I have the Def. Techs in another (smaller) room hooked up to a Vincent SP-331 hybrid amplifier. My bottom line question is what would be a decent option for this cubical size room, trying to stay within a $3K budget. The bi-polar design speakers seem to meet most of the requirements but sound a bit diffused to my taste. Anyone has experience with the newer/slimmer Def. Tech. tower models? What about the Magnepan 1.7? Thanks in advance. 

128x128kalali

Showing 6 responses by erik_squires

It kind of depends how you listen. If your biggest concern is having a full sound between the speakers no matter where you are, sure you want a wide dispersion.

However, in a reverberant, untreated room you sacrifice smooth frequency response and natural/accurate sounding imaging. In general, the closer your speakers are to boundaries, the less dispersion you want, or the more room treatment you need.

My suggestion is to reach out to GIK Acoustics FIRST. Figure out what you want or are willing to do with the room treatment, then choose speakers.

In that room, the ML’s would be your better option if you could keep them away from the rear wall and at an angle.

Good room treatment makes your room more speaker friendly, plus, you may trade speakers many times, but no one ever trades in good acoustics. :)

Best,


Erik
Here's an experiment you can run yourself.  Listen to your speakers from around 2' away. Then listen to them in their proper location.

The difference in clarity, detail, air, etc. you hear is all due to room acoustics.

Best,


Erik
Oh, I'm not saying you should LISTEN to the speakers up close! :)

I just meant, you should know just how much detail is lost when your room acoustics are poor.

Best,

Erik
@infection

Not a bad idea, they do play very nicely in a corner, but have kind of a "classic speaker" sound to them, which may be just what the OP wants. :)

Best,


Erik
I've never tried a DIY solution, but the GIK Acoustic Soffit Traps are among the highest value bass traps you can buy.  They are unique in how deep they go for the space and money