Optimum speaker height for home theater.


While I was at the theater this weekend to see "Ratatouille", all of the side and rear speakers were overhead.

In home theaters that I've seen here on the 'Gon, most of the speakers were at ear level. Most of the diagrams that I've seen for home theaters were for the speakers to be set at ear level are just above.

Does elevating the side and rear speakers ten feet off the floor (as in a movie theater) give an advantage over it being at ear level.

I have really high ceilings, and I have the possibility to elevate my side and rear speakers to movie theater height.

Any sonic advantages to elevating side and rear speakers?
128x128mitch4t

Showing 1 response by flrnlamb

"I plan to go to a 9.1 setup. All of the surround speakers will be full-range Infinity Kappa 9. The surrounds will not be used for music at all....only for home theater.

The Kappa 9 are 5ft tall. I was considering mounting them at 10ft off the floor (my ceiling is 22ft high)." (mitch4t)

A few issues come to mind when I think about your considerations here, and it all leads to BALANCE! First, you MUST deal with some sort of system equalization or DSP room correction, and I recommend bass managment!(even for larger speakers, like the Kappa's). Basically, the speakers are going to be on/near the walls, and bass modes will need to be dealt with, as well as smoothing out the bass hump/boom that will be pressent near the room boundaries, when you place speakers there.
Another consideration is the "speaker aim" and "comb-filtering" from driver to driver, in relation to the seating possitions! You will likely encounter some response filtering, if your speakers aren't "aimed" at the seating possitions, largely. You can experience this phenominon by simply playing a speaker on the floor, and ducking down, or standing above the speaker, and listen for "roll-off", "holes in the sound", "tonality change", etc! This is a factor, for sure. that's why more wide dispersion, dedicated rears, even dipoles are often effective, in part. Dirrect radiators often are more "beamy" in pressentation. So those would be SOME of the concerns I would want to adress, if it were my system
Also, yes, even though those speakers may be more full range, I'd cross em over higher, get WAY more effeciency out of em, and enlist plenty of worthy subwoofers into the system! (this is another issue to deal with entirely).
Also, setting delays for the surrounds might be a bit tricky, depending on how you set the speakers up in relation to the seating arrangement. You migh consult the "pro audio forums" or info on cinema speaker set-up's, and dig around to see what they're doing for multiple surround arrays, delays, eq'ing, etc.
For me, it's ALWAYS quality before quantity! But, yes, balance, is necessary.
Good luck