Dipole Asymmetry


I am considering purchase of a pair of Martin Logan Summit X speakers. In my room, I am somewhat constrained for speaker placement. I could place the speakers about 3-4 feet off the front wall. My main concern is my audio rack would be placed directly behind the left speaker, while there would be nothing placed behind the right speaker. How detrimental would this asymmetry be on sound quality?
imgoodwithtools
I agree with prior post re trying to maintain symmetry by placing something acoustically equivalent behind the right speaker as well (perhaps even something on wheels, if can't locate there permanently).

I have ML Expression's (formerly had Summit's) in my asymmetric family room (with large open hallway on right side).  Using a combination of absorption and diffusion, via custom bookshelves behind the speakers, plus a bit more than the recommended "toe in," I've been able to tame the back wave so I still have a deep soundstage and centered image.  With a little creativity and experimentation, you should be able to make it work.
Would you please explain why you'd put absorption behind a dipole speaker, when part of the dipole concept includes reflection off the wall behind the speaker?
@cleeds the sound reflected off the wall behind the speaker is not a GOAL of dipoles it's the DOWNSIDE aka THE COST of dipoles. Try reading the setup tips page on Sound Lab's site for detailed explanation including the math. It boils down to minimizing what you hear from the late extraneous back wave of sound will give you the most satisfaction from dipoles.

The dynamic woofer behavior is another ball of wax with another pile of suggestions I'm sure. That's why I prefer full range electrostatics to hybrids. Cheers,
Spencer 
sbank
@cleeds the sound reflected off the wall behind the speaker is not a GOAL of dipoles it's the DOWNSIDE aka THE COST of dipoles. Try reading the setup tips page on Sound Lab's site for detailed explanation including the math
Oh no, I couldn't disagree more. If you're interested in reading, read the setup manual for Infinity IRS series. The reflection off the back wall from a dipole speaker is deliberate, by design; manufacturers could easily prevent it by not leaving the drivers open in the back. But they don't.