So if I understand you correctly, your room, which is one of "all rooms", has acoustics problems....that you solved by positioning the speakers...and required no "treatment"?
My room, like all rooms, effects what I hear when I am listening.
Repositioning my speakers changed how the room interacted with the sound (which is now eminating from a different location and with a different primary axis of emission) to cause the sound at my listening position to be different than it had been before. I considered the change for the placment I ended up with an improvement.
So exactly how does that differ from my and Sean's et al, position?
You believe that rooms have no effect on sound. I am well aware that is not true.
What room "problem" did you solve (via positioning), that was directly attributed to the room (all of which have problems)???
For one thing, I reduced early reflections from the bass driver by moving the speakers out from the wall. I also reduced a couch that was interacting with the sound by toe-ing in the units.
Which ones are? Do any of the speakers used previously reveal the problems that must exist in the room?
I would hate to invite myself over if you don't like. This is going to be in your home, I'm the guest remember? Is your interest in having alien acoustic sources and beliefs in your room causing you to waver?
Let's just take a portable audio source you like to five-guys and crank it. We can compare it to out-doors.
So, in your reality and "thought experiments", your (untreated) living room is the (real world) rarity and an "all-concrete room (perhaps an indoor pool area, or a bathroom with hard ceiling)" would be the norm for a listening room?
Who said anything about "norm"? You keep asserting that rooms don't affect sound. If that's the case, then you should find no SQ losss playing your gear in a room of bare tile walls. It should sound identical to an anechoic chamber.
Could you please use the forum "Quote" function and quote exactly who said that? TIA.
No. Vastly overrated. The room is rarely, if ever the problem.
You then spend the next half-dozen pages simply dismissing the entire idea and leveling passive-aggressive insinuations against any statement to the contrary.
If you believe I've mischaracterized your position, and that you don't believe rooms have no effect: you've had ample opportunity to clarify yourself.
Having had several occasions to hear the exact same speakers in the exact same room before and after the carpet was replaced with tile: I know too well that "normal" rooms can have signifigant effect.
Tile bathrooms, something most everyone has been in, and which affect sound so much as to be unpleasent, are a good example. My earliest experiences were actually with things like overturned boats. Water really does nasty things to sound in small spaces.