Seating height and bass


So my myriad of other threads seem to have me believing I have a null which explains the lack of low bass at my sitting position.

tonight I pushed the couch out of the room and used a chair instead. Bass was much improved but I realized that with the chair my ears are at tweeter height. Sitting in the couch they are several inches below the tweeter.

i stacked some books to mimic my height when sitting on the now displaced couch and started moving them closer to the speakers. I tried 6 positions starting at where I normally sit (relative to the front wall/back wall) and there were differences. However I moved that chair to the same positions and better bass in each spot (some more than others but all better than the books/couch). 
Anyone else run into this? Bass better when stating vs sitting? I wish I could borrow any pair of stand mount speakers and try this again to see if, what I believe to be poor engineering/stands for aesthetics not performance, is indeed the case. My speakers are on 24” stands but are front ported with a big 4” port at the bottom front raising the drivers up 4”+.
gochurchgo
Or you can change the spectral balance yourself if you know how to do it and want to try. Commanility in all rooms are they have walls floors and ceilings. You can redirect and use some of this energy that travels these surfaces and redirect a portion to your advantage. Tom
Or: move the couch back into position, and using the regular stands turn the speakers upside down.  See what that sounds like.  Might be horrible, but....
@erik_squires  excellent. Makes total
sense. I’ll give that a try

@twoleftears  I did try this and it sounded off. These speakers actually screw to the stand and so when upside down seemed bass light. I’ll try it again though.
When the speakers are unscrewed from the stand surface they are mechanically decoupled and resolution will suffer. Tom
If I remember correctly, most speakers want the tweeter to be positioned at ear height. That would be step number one.


That's a good starting point. This isn't always true. Some B&W's seem to measure much better at midrange axis, but only your own ears can tell you what you like. :)