So I got the Onkyo 7100 avr with Emotiva B1+ speakers and the sound just doesn't seem that impressive, like it's not really clear.
I should mention that I also have a pair of Monitor Audio Bronze 100 and a pair of Elac DBR62 Debut Reference bookshelves speakers also in the house but I have not hooked them up yet.
I want to test each pairs out according their price points.
I also want to trouble shoot any bottlenecks and make sure all my ducks are lined up before I move on. By the way the speakers I just mentioned are definitely bigger then the B1+, so the amount of space around my B1+ will it also be enough for the other speakers I have you think ?
It looks like you're driving yourself crazy trying to answer all your questions at the same time. You said "the sound [of the Emotiva B1+ speakers] just doesn't seem that impressive, like it's not really clear. Is it 1) the speakers, 2) the location, or 3) something else like the AVR?
First of all, turn off all the electronic room correction efforts by the AVR. Listen to those speakers as they came in their boxes, without any other effort to modify their sound. Turn off any sub-woofer, for now. Do this as soon as you can, without wasting time or confusing yourself over other separate questions, such as room location, AVR sound equalization, etc.
It will help if you pick about 3 pieces of music that you know and like, and use them for all the listening comparisons.
1) Listen to all three pairs of speakers, one pair at a time, to answer the question if one of those speakers sounds better. It doesn't matter what location you use. It might as well be where you now have your speakers. Pick one speaker pair as a first-round favorite.
2) Then, find out if your present arrangement of speakers and listening position is a problem. Try moving the speakers away from that corner by the TV, as far as possible from other walls. It's not a permanent arrangement, think of it as an experiment. The aim is to listen while avoiding possible negative effects of speakers being too close to the corner or walls. Listen to the three pairs of speakers again. Does the new location make all the speakers sound better, or not greatly different? Pick a second-round favorite. Is it the same as the first-round, or different?
3) After you've done that, you can try to answer the question about room correction software. Does it help a speaker's sound, or does it hurt it? That answer
might be different depending on the speakers, and
will be different different depending on location. Don't do this until after you decide on what speakers to keep, and where they will be located.
All this can take time. Sorting out all these possible problems will provide you some useful answers.