S
Steelers252006
Audioholic
Got my room painted yesterday, am thinking the sub should go in the corner to the right of the TV. Your thoughts? Four pics included.
Or, flip it upside down for the sliding / testing locations exercise. That’s what I’ve done and it works great on carpet.Don't forget to put that beast on carpet sliders it'll be easy to slide around that way
Leads to a couple more...of sub is placed in left corner, should it be toed in? Also, the wall my TV is on is at least 16 feet long. Should the TV be centered in the wall for the best sound? Been playing with it all day. Currently I DO have it centered with the Ultra Towers in each corner toes in. And, finally, does it matter should the sub be say eight to ten feet away in the left corner as opposed to say four to six? Is there a limit on how far is too far?The left corner would be better. Subs usually do best in or near a corner with uninterrupted boundaries in both directions. This typically gets the best extension, output and minimizes nulls (although the unusual sloped ceiling might introduce one). Often corner placement gets you a peak in the frequency response, but that is easily tamed with a parametric equalizer.
Regards,
Wayne A. Pflughaupt
Not necessary. Again, omnidirectional soundwaves.Leads to a couple more...of sub is placed in left corner, should it be toed in?
More than anything, I would try to get at least 2-3 feet say from your speaker and a corner/wall, like you have it in the photo. No closer to that closet.Also, the wall my TV is on is at least 16 feet long. Should the TV be centered in the wall for the best sound?
That is something you can experiment with... toed in at your ears/ toed in crossing in front (weird, yes, but I've seen it) / toed in slightly so that you can still see the inner-sides of the speakers (aimed past you and crossing behind you) / or perpendicular to the front and back walls. Every speaker and room is a little different.Currently I DO have it centered with the Ultra Towers in each corner toes in.
This can be complicated. Because the Low Frequency Soundwave are so big, it is easy to find yourself in nulls. (This is why multiple subs come into play.) There are places in a room where a person could somewhat accurately predict problems. Say if your room was 20' x 20' x 10', and your sub was in the front wall, and you were on the back wall, you would be in a null most likely. Your room isn't like that!And, finally, does it matter should the sub be say eight to ten feet away in the left corner as opposed to say four to six? Is there a limit on how far is too far?
I can hear Shady in my head...bear in mind this is one heavy SOB of a sub!!! Lol!!!! I guess I can still stick it on my couch and try the sub crawl.Not necessary. Again, omnidirectional soundwaves.
More than anything, I would try to get at least 2-3 feet say from your speaker and a corner/wall, like you have it in the photo. No closer to that closet.
That is something you can experiment with... toed in at your ears/ toed in crossing in front (weird, yes, but I've seen it) / toed in slightly so that you can still see the inner-sides of the speakers (aimed past you and crossing behind you) / or perpendicular to the front and back walls. Every speaker and room is a little different.
This can be complicated. Because the Low Frequency Soundwave are so big, it is easy to find yourself in nulls. (This is why multiple subs come into play.) There are places in a room where a person could somewhat accurately predict problems. Say if your room was 20' x 20' x 10', and your sub was in the front wall, and you were on the back wall, you would be in a null most likely. Your room isn't like that!
As I said before, I would crawl out the best 2-3 spots for your sub based on your main LP. You can guess placement, and you may guess wrong. My example is valid: corner placement isn't always the best. Every room and scenario are different. With your ceiling, especially so: it may help or hurt your cause. My instinct is that you should shoot for 7-11' away from LP, and the distance from sub to each speaker should be different and irregular. Also, since you have some low frequency source on that front wall with your speakers, I would personally look to put the sub elsewhere and potentially benefit from exciting a different room mode than what your speakers might. My instincts say right wall where your file cabinet is, or left wall just to the near side of the window, further from your speaker. My next spots would be to look near the corners of your back wall, but not necessarily in the corners. Still try them out in the corners, but be willing to experiment!![]()
Don’t put it on the couch unless you really want to. No need. I would pull the couch out of the way, though and put it as close to where you will be sitting though. Just pull it into the room so you can check along that back wall. Once you start to hear the differences in sound, it will go kind of fast... it’s just getting to that point that you need patience.I can hear Shady in my head...bear in mind this is one heavy SOB of a sub!!! Lol!!!! I guess I can still stick it on my couch and try the sub crawl.
What is REW?Great discussion here on sub location.
REW is the best of course - it will drive placement with empirical data. Avoiding nulls at the MLP is the first priority.
Corner placement excites all room modes, which is my preference for a starting point - if the AV processor can EQ the subwoofer channel (like XT32).
Sub crawl is usually an option but not with the PB16-Ultra - it's just impractical to place that sub at the MLP. So that leaves moving the sub around to available locations in the room.
While the SoundPath Subwoofer Isolation System feet are indeed much taller, they are so grippy that dragging the subwoofer with them attached can damage the feet or even tear out the threaded insert from the cabinet.
Furniture sliders under the feet work well - get smooth ones for carpeting and get padded ones for smooth floors. Then the sub can be pushed around without damaging the feet/cabinet.
Is that an app?Room EQ Wizard is a measurement program that many use to dial in their systems... it helps analyze the acoustics you experience in your room much more accurately than Audyssey does, for example.