Setting up Analog In a New Room From Scratch


I am fixing to move to a different house in about a month. Where I am now, I have been restricted about where I could set up my system and I am doing the old everything on a rack between and behind the speakers setup. In the new place, I get my own room to do what I want and it is 20 X 16. I plan to use one of the long walls for the speakers.

I want to set up my turntable in the best spot possible, but not in another room like some do. Getting up at all is enough sacrifice for me, I am not trudging back and forth between rooms. Now, I get a bit of rumble if I turn the gain up too high, too quickly and figure that slightly bad bass response results from room interaction. Where is the best spot for the table? On a side wall? If so, at mid-point? Some point of minimum reflection? Back wall? That would seem worse than behind and between the speakers. Something tells me that corners are out, too. I have a wall mount for my table that is about 42 inches high.

Also, I have 10' speaker cables that cost me more than I want to admit. If I locate the table (and other components) somewhere farther than 10' from the speakers, am I better off to adjust by:

1) Locating just the table in the best spot and then running longer phono cables to my phono stage, located with all other components (but not between the speakers)?

2) Locating just the table and phono stage in the best spot (to minimize phono cable length) and then running a longer IC from phono stage to preamp where the preamp is placed near the amp and so that the preamp to amp IC remains at 1m and the 10' speaker cable length is sufficient to reach the amp?

3) Locating everything in the same proximity to each other and getting longer speaker cables?

4) Some other option?

Thanks
motdathird
Dan, I am particularly obliged to you for your response as it gives me some insight on alternate table setup locations and IC advise. I'm not sure that I will ever be able to afford 6m IC's, at least not of the quailty I have in my 1m pairs.

I am surprised there is not more experiences posted here. Maybe it is a dumb question or maybe I am asking it incorrectly. Or maybe most people just go with the between and behind spot and say to hell with it.
In many respects, the equipment and how it interacts electrically and vibration wise (due to room construction) will determine where the "best" spot is in any given situation.

Are the floors solid or suspended?
Are the walls solid brick or somesuch or wood and plaster?
How well can your electronics drive cables - the various components? If not well, you may need "expensive" interconnects.
Is the table suspended or not?
Got subs? speaks that go low?

and so on ....

The only real way is to try things out as every room/system interaction is different.

good luck and have fun!

regards,

Stephen
Thanks to all. I suppose I am left with only one question since I understand the notion of having to try things out as far as cables.

Does anyone have a recommendation for locating JUST the table? I do not even care that much about CD but I would like to put the table where it would be best and then adjust to suit it. I have a wall mount (solid) and a non-suspended table.
I see all these very complex and expensive solutions to your problem, and wonder why the simple solution of a shelf which doesn't flex isn't workable. It will not eliminate room interactions (which can only be mitigated at best), but it will solve your rumble problem without forcing you to the purchase of more expensive cables, assuming your shelf - not the frame but the shelf within it - is not already dense and inflexible (mass is the key in the case of non-suspended turntables). In order to test this theory, simply place a slab of something relatively inert and heavy on your shelf and see, a large kitchen cutting-board etc... If it works you've saved money and can simply site the shelf where it will work with the cables you have, if not, then you'll have to consider more expensive options. Precisely what type of 'table do you have?
John does offer a good, practical solution. If it were me I would find a practical location and then test it for low frequency response just to help eliminate airborne feedback. Normally you won't have to move more than a couple feet or so to get out of the peak and into a null, assuming it's not near a corner. The heavy mass on the shelf should do the rest. I would still keep the phono stage as close as possible to the TT.