I currently have the speakers against the center of the long wall of my room with the subwoofer on the floor between the speakers. (the sub is localizable everywhere, but least localizable there.)
Could you guys teach me the secrets of room acoustic wizardry? I have a bed mattress on each of the shorter walls thinking they might do something. A rug covering the tiled floor. I am trying to get the best audio possible out of my bedroom, and I am willing to sleep on the floor to achieve this. I will post pictures and or room dimensions if requested.
Also: I am a poor, punk teenager with no job/money. Please help me.
If it's easy enough to run an experiment, try putting them on a short wall instead. Ideal is to have the setup be lengthwise, I assume* so that modal intensity can be reduced.
Once you've done that, (and this is for pure performance for the dollar, with zero consideration to looks or convenience), try seating yourself about 38% from the front or back wall. (b pape has said that number can drop down to 33% with the inclusion of non-axial modes, but in that ballpark, after all your head won't be in a vice).
After that, play with your speakers without any inhibition. Even if they come out several feet into the room. If you found the perfect place, you can always just mark those spots somehow, and just pull speakers there for critical listening.
Well, just some ideas.
- Don't put your sub in a corner. While it gives the most sheer output there, it's usually one of the worst places for smooth frequency response.
Ah, thanks very much for saying this b pape, as maybe I'm not insane for not following the ubiquitous mantra of corner loading. I've never had luck with a corner loaded sub, ever, even in demo rooms. What I do read is that IF* (you know, a really big IF), the room has been properly treated, specifically for bass, then the corner loading can be used for lowering distortion, or increasing efficiency, without fears of modal issues.
I'm sure you know more about the pros and cons to this than I do but I have heard an argument against doing this. Any chance of you giving us the Cliff Notes version both sides of the argument and the reason for your position?
TIA,
Alex
The argument against doing this is to expand stereo width, I believe, with the side wall reflections. However, even those who argue for this will say that the speaker must have superb off-axis-response, as only then will the reflections have a chance of adding to what you hear in a positive way.
What I thought* I had read was that this was specifically with stereo, and that in mch situations, this doesn't really apply. However, I am talking outta my butt on this one, and might very well be wrong here.
Another situation where one may want to treat the sidewall, even with good offaxis, is when it's an asymmetrical room, with one wall much closer than the other, or something . . .