Speaker Placement & Room Acoustics
Let me give an example.
When I first go my BP7000SC, I placed them 6" from the front wall and faced the active 14" subwoofers toward the side walls.
I thought, "My gosh! I just bought these huge rather expensive speakers and they sound all muddy, bloated, unfocused, and just plain bad! What they heck were those reviewers from Home Theater Mag, Sound & Vision, and Audio-Video Revolution were thinking? What were they smoking or drinking?"
Then I faced the active subwoofers towards each other and away from the side walls, plus I pulled the speakers 24" away from the front walls.
The difference was like Night and Day. It was like turning on a Magic Switch.
The sound was extremely clear, smooth, focused, and the bass was clean, deep, and powerful. I thought, "Ah, that's what those reviewers were talking about!"
I bought four acoustic panels/bass traps (4" x 24" x 48") and placed them in the four corners. I also tried placing them on the sides. I could not hear a difference at all.
A) Is it because room treatments don't work?
B) Or is it because my particular room already has good acoustics?
C) Maybe I need 8 or 12 panels instead of 4?
I would say B & C are correct. But since I already love the sound, I'm not willing to buy any more panels.
If I base my opinions solely on showroom auditions thus far, I would have to say that every single speaker I've heard (including DefTechs, B&W 800D, Paradigm Studio 100, Mirage, Klipsch) sound TERRIBLE. In fact, my NHT SuperZero + SW2P subwoofer in my room sounded a lot better than anyone of them in the Showrooms!
When I had my Harman Kardon AVR247, I tried the Automatic Room EQ several times at different times. And every single time, the Room EQ would make the sound TERRIBLE. It sounded compressed, bloated, muddy - very unclear sound. Then I turned off the Room EQ, and the sound was great again.
We all prefer CLEAR, SMOOTH, NON-FATIGUING sound with good CLEAN BASS.
Some prefer a little less bass, and some prefer a lot more bass, but still clean bass, not some muddy bass we hear from those cars on the streets.