Experimenting with Speaker Room Placement


Hi - was having troubles with my room, which is 12 wide by 20 long, so logically I was thinking put the speakers on the shorter 12ft wall and sit back about 11-12 feet so I'd have more room between listener and the speakers. But tried my PSB towers, PSB bookshelfs, Bose Bookshelves, JBL bookshelves (and tried PSB sub with each) and that placement was always boomy bass and fatiguing sound. Just didn't sound right. 

So I tried setting up speakers on the long wall, the 20FT wall. It looks odd since I'm sitting pretty close to the speakers, about 7-8 Ft vs. 12 Ft, and the speakers are right up against the wall, and my listening chair is right up against the opposite wall. But it's more listenable, and bass seems tighter. Both the floorstanders and the bookshelves sound better. 

I'm still trying to purchase a new pair of speakers for this room (the other speakers mentioned were just borrowed from other rooms and from my home theatre setup). 

So wondering if others have experimented and found the long wall is better? It's more of a near field listening experience and looks odd having large towers that close to the listener. Would this position get fatiguing after a while? Should I treat the back wall with something since that wall is right behind my ears? What speakers are you using that seem to work well in this type of close listening setup?  If I place the speakers back on the shorter wall, is my issue that I need bass traps along the shorter wall to tighten the bass? 

Thanks very much for any guidance!  

kansas400

Showing 1 response by handymann

Newbee and siox have it correct, as many others, at least in my experience. Jim Smith and Dennis Foley have very valuable info on this topic. Use the rule of thirds to start out with and go from there. A equal lateral triangle is a good place to start concerning your speakers and listening chair. . Plenty of room from your front and back wall, as far as speaker placement and listening chair. Move your listening chair up. This helps to give your sound a chance to fully develope. Diffusers and absorption will greatly improve the sound. First and second reflection points need absorption and possibly diffusion. Both on front and rear walls. In my experience, u want the room to be as deep as possible. It takes around 60' for a 30 hz note to develope. Vary few of us have that deep of a room. Cut that in half, then in half again. Lots of absorption on the rear wall makes your room "seem" deeper. I've heard it said an outside field, with no walls or ceiling is the best set up. Crazy.