Standing waves


I think I have a serious problem with standing waves. Is there anything simple I can do to help this? My listening room is big, its my living room that opens up to my kitchen, the whole area is probably about 50 x 15. I have the speakers on the short wall about 6 feet apart and about 1 foot from the wall, The floors are concrete covered with ceramic tile, and a large throw rug over that covering abuot 75% of the floor. Thanks! Oh, I am using ATC active 50s...
jposs
Celtic66 it's nice to see someone is trying to pick up the slack now that Cornfedboy is gone. But don't worry in time it will all pass.
Each frequency put out by your speaker has a different wavelength determined by the speed of sound in air. A wave reflecting back and forth between two parallel walls will reinforce itself if the nodes of the wave coincide with the room boundaries. Thus your room selects a set of frequencies coming from your speaker to reinforce. If you sit at the PEAK of a reinforced standing wave (also called a mode) that frequency will appear louder. If you sit at a null of the standing wave, the frequency will appear to be sucked out.

So EVERYONE listening inside rooms with opposing parallel walls has a standing wave problem
This is an interesting topic. I have a Mac 2000 amp, Mac C100 pre, ECM-1 CD player with Nautilus 803's. Pretty good stuff, but those standing waves. Talk about nulls and modes. My room is 11 X 12 and is kind of small, but comfy. I treated the room with Echo Buster bass traps, diffuser and absortive panels. These helped a bunch, but still problems with placing my one chair in the room and speakers to avoid areas of total lack of some frequencies and over emphasis of others. Any ideas where to place my chair vs. these speakers?
Amwarwick: Check a thread entitled "Near field listening and speaker placement" In the various posts of this thread are references to several useful websites which address exactly the question you have asked