Where do I position 4 speakers for 3D stereo sound


My room is 22-15-8 feet. I have a pair of K-horns, and a pair of Lascalas. The K-horns are along the short wall facing outward using four foot false walls. The Lascalas are in the rear to provide a 3D effect. Both pairs are using separate Mark Levinson 334 amps. I am aware that these speakers are designed to be played loudly. However, when played at a low volume, they can create sound effortlessly, and without any distortion at all. My problem is how far back from the K-horns should the sweetspot be positioned,and where should the rear speakers be positioned
to provide the best 3D sound? If the sweetspot is ten feet from the K-horns, then all speakers will be equal distanced from the sweetspot. But is ten feet too close to the front speakers? If the sweetspot is moved back, will I be too close to the back speakers creating phase problems? In that case, should the rear speakers be reflected off the back wall, or side wall? With this in mind, the high frequencies from the tweeters will be lost? Does anybody have any ideas about this problem?
redwoodgarden

Showing 2 responses by ezmeralda11

You didn't specify your processing. If you're just going to run two sets of stereo pairs I don't think it'll do much to achieve the effects you want. You'll need some type of processer before placement becomes an issue. Two speakers can do 3D when well placed.
"However, I have found that the effect is all up front."

This could be how it was recorded. High-fidelity (faithful to the source) is one thing, special effects are another. You're basically doing surround sound with music, some discs have far more material on them for this endeavor than others.

"Which processor would be best for creating spacial ambiance through only the rear speakers using today's technology?"

Depends on the recording. There are Dolby Surround Music only recordings. However, you'll probably get the most mileage with one of the generic matrixing type devices to turn two into four--I can't remember who did what off hand. It could add some neat effects, but I'm not sure you're necessarily going to step into a concert hall with it. Ambisonics requires 4 or 5 microphones to do a proper recording w/ ss music.