b)The combination of the three dimensions of your room generally will pro- duce at least three points in the room where the frequency response you experience related to a given position (of either the speaker or you) will either greatly increase or almost disappear. The most obvious effects are on low frequencies, but
c)Distances of speakers from the walls can make great differences in the number, strength, and particular frequencies of secondary reflections— changing
2.You in Relation to the Speakers
Where you sit in relation to your speakers obviously makes a difference too. The proportions of the particular triangle formed by your speakers and you matter. (You may need to send more power to the more distant speaker to compensate if you get much further from one speaker than the other.) The overall distances involved also matter. As you get further from the speakers, more sound reflected from your room’s surfaces (in contrast to the sound coming directly from the speakers) reaches your ears, and the original spatial relationships in a recording are changed as your room “takes over.” Sometimes the result is a mellower, more “integrated” sound. Other times, it’s a more strident or annoyingly
Keep in mind that the right
3.You in Relation to Room Boundaries
Changing your own position with respect to a room’s boundaries may also bring a big effect, sometimes for a small change. Getting further from the wall behind you may make sound more precise and localized. Getting closer may make sound more “mellow” and integrated. Coming too
Remember too, with respect to your own positioning, that it
As you consider the three relationships we have outlined, the idea is to manipulate whatever variable is easiest and most productive for improving your listening experience.
Be sure to base your judgements on listening to a good variety of recordings of vocals, and acoustic instruments, soloists, different movies and musical instruments to most easily recognize tonal balance shifts.
IV. | POSITIONING SURROUND SPEAKERS |
| Your surround speakers and how they are positioned will determine the sonic realism of |
| movies and |
| Most surround sound is meant more to create greater depth and overall ambience than to |
| localize effects as coming from a particular spot. This is especially true of Dolby |
| surround sound, in which both surround channels carry the same (monophonic) informa- |
| tion and can’t be differentiated from each other. With Dolby Digital and DTS surround |
| sound, there is very definite localization of some surround effects. How much you prefer |
| these localized effects vs. overall sonic depth and diffusion is up to your listening prefer- |
| ences. If you are listening to |
| of instruments. But if your main concern is the surround effects in movies, they tend to |
| depend more on |
| aim your surround speakers to produce the effects you prefer, whether precisely pinpointed |
| or pleasantly diffused. Although some people prefer to have their surround speakers behind |
| them on stands at ear height, most find it easiest and best to mount compact monitors on |
| the walls, at least two feet above your ear height when you are seated. We offer matching |
| speaker brackets to make |
| Mite and Alpha Midi all have dimple marks on their rear panels to indicate the best place to |
| drill for brackets. Image 1B, 2B, and 3LR and 10S speakers include a bracket mounting |
| hole template in their owner’s kit. Image 3LR and 10S include flush mount wall brackets. |
| If your listening room is small, aiming the speakers to diffuse their sound somewhat may |
| produce the best overall surround illusion. They can be mounted, for instance, on the side |
| walls and aimed to bounce sound off the rear walls, or vice versa. If you opt for localiza- |
| tion of sound from the surrounds, the speakers should face your listening spot, aimed at or |
| slightly above your seated position. Speakers mounted on the side walls generally will |
| sound best when placed a foot or two behind your seating area. Our illustration shows |
| some typical placement options. Image 10S Bipole provides diffuse sound. Position of |
| front tweeters to ears can increase portion of direct sound. |