Speakers good for close to wall placement


There are quite a few speakers I would like to purchase, but I need to be realistic. I will need to find some speakers that perform well when placed close to the rear wall. After that choice I can move on to selecting the proper integrated amp to drive them. Any suggestions on which speakers work well near the rear wall?
cincyhound

Showing 2 responses by yyzsantabarbara

I made a post on this thread about using Digital Room Correction (DRC) and putting the speakers close to the wall. The @millercarbon was sighing and in tears when I posted that saying that is a bad idea.

Well this past Friday, I finally got to hear my room optimized by DRC. I got my DRC done by AcousticSound.ca. That is for my digital only playback via ROON. My analog sources are not part of my DRC solution since I am doing this via the way more powerful computer software and not weak hardware like many here have done. Doing this via software (Audiolense or Accurate) is complicated and that is why I outsourced this work. My analog sources are used mainly with my headphone so no DRC needed.

So far, I have received 1 of 6 Convolution filters (I paid for) to plug into ROON (can also use JRiver). Well, my mind is blown with the first attempt. Incredible improvement over the sound without DRC. My room is acoustically treated and sounds great with a KEF LS50, which is an appropriate speaker from my crappy office. Without the treatments even my LS50’s sounded awful.

Well I wanted floor stander in the office because I like them so much better. This is where the DRC had to come into the picture to make the speaker work (Thiel CS3.7). The way my solution works is that ROON functions as a software audio equalizer on my digital file or stream BEFORE the bits are sent to my DAC. It alters the frequency curve that will be reproduced by my speakers to be optimized for my room.

This post I link below is where I gush over how a "big speaker fits into a small room". I have photos of my room and links to technical references which include another persons play-by-play example of exactly what I did using Tekton speakers.

https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/room-correction-roon-rew-room-eq-wizard/post?postid=2064340#2...

BTW - the guy doing my system is a bit of a rock star in this DSP field. At least that is my perspective after reading his book and reading his incredible articles and posts on computeraudiophile.com

A teaser quote from the author of the article.

Yes, we can using specialized loudspeaker and room correction DSP software designed to solve these problems. I have written numerous articles about it, including a book, but in this article, we are only interested in “what” it can do and not “how” it does it. The latter is for another article as this type of highly specialized DSP is mostly misunderstood. Further, very few DSP products provide the needed time domain correction capability. Finally, the “effectiveness” of so-called Digital Room Correction (DRC) products vary wildly. The top two or three DSP software products in this category far outpace other products by a wide margin based on my experience evaluating just about all of them over a ten year period.

 

So let’s jump right to the results of applying SOTA DSP loudspeaker and room correction to John’s already excellent loudspeakers. Remember what the DSP is accomplishing is restoring the ideal loudspeaker response arriving at our ears with no frequency or timing distortion.