Vivek Batra
Well-Known Member
Hi Folks
It's been a long time I contributed anything on this esteemed forum with very informed enthusiasts. I did something with my system with the help of AI (Chat GPT) and gained a lot out of, so sharing a direct write up from the AI, if it could help others as well. I started with explaining my gear, room size and a photo of current placements, the gpt gave back a modified photo with new placement options to try. The result is as below.
Dialing in My Klipsch Forte III + Luxman System
#
System Overview
* Speakers: Klipsch Forte III
* Amplifier: Luxman L-590AXII MkII
* DAC: Luxman DA-06
* Room: ~18 × 14 ft, false ceiling, carpet, curtains, couch
* Front wall: Mostly wooden (~10.7 ft center), ~17" concrete on each side
---
#
Initial Observations (Before Any Changes)
I started noticing a few things:
* Bass suddenly felt excessive (turned out to be loose speaker connection)
* Sound was **very sharp / slightly shrill at times**
* Imaging was **pinpoint accurate but too narrow**
* Sweet spot was extremely tight — had to sit exactly in center
* Sound felt **“in your face”** rather than layered
* Left/right separation was very strong, but sometimes unnatural
At that stage, everything sounded technically impressive—but not always enjoyable.
---
#
Step 1 — Fixing the Basics
* Tightened speaker connections → bass normalized
* Confirmed placement symmetry
* Understood that Forte III are highly revealing and directional
Lesson: Small physical issues can cause big sonic changes.
---
#
Step 2 — Speaker Placement Overhaul
This was the biggest change.
### Before:
* Speakers ~30" from side walls
* ~8.6 ft apart
* Listening distance ~11 ft
### Adjustments explored:
* Slight outward toe
* Increased listening distance
* Careful spacing relative to wooden wall
* Eventually settled around:
* ~8.5–8.7 ft spacing
* ~22–24" from front wall
* ~11 ft listening distance
---
#
Immediate Results
* **Shrillness reduced significantly**
* Sound became **more relaxed and natural**
* Sweet spot widened noticeably
* Center image remained intact
* Listening fatigue dropped
This was a turning point.
---
#
Step 3 — Understanding What Changed
What I learned:
* Wider spacing + more distance = less direct horn energy
* Slightly off-axis listening = smoother highs
* Room reflections (especially wood wall) started helping instead of hurting
---
#
Step 4 — Imaging Shift (Interesting Discovery)
After placement changes:
* Sound became **more centered and cohesive**
* Left/right separation moved slightly inward
* Stage felt less “etched” but more natural
Initially felt like I “lost separation,” but actually:
I gained **coherence and realism**
---
#
Step 5 — Fine Tuning for Width + Depth
Goal:
> Keep width, regain layering, maintain center
Adjustments:
* Increased speaker distance from wall (22–24")
* Reduced excessive toe-out
* Tuned in **1-inch increments**
* Adjusted listening height slightly below horn axis
* Used wooden wall for mild diffusion instead of damping it
---
#
Step 6 — Tone Controls & Loudness (Game Changer)
I realized something important:
Loudness ON sounded more engaging
Instead of blindly accepting or rejecting:
I created usage patterns:
### Presets I now use:
**1. Reference Mode**
* Tone OFF, Loudness OFF
**2. Relaxed Listening (daily use)**
* Bass +1
* Treble -1
**3. Low Volume**
* Loudness ON
**4. Old Recordings**
* Bass +1 or +2
* Treble -1 or -2
This made a bigger difference than expected.
---
#
Final Result (Where I Ended Up)
Now my system sounds:
* Wide but not exaggerated
* Centered but not stuck
* Layered (front–back depth improved)
* Smooth yet detailed
* Much less fatiguing
* Enjoyable across more seating positions
Most importantly:
> I listen longer and enjoy music more
---
#
Key Learnings
1. **Speaker placement > gear upgrades**
2. 1-inch adjustments matter more than expensive cables
3. Horn speakers reward precise positioning
4. Tone controls are tools, not compromises
5. Room interaction defines final sound
6. “Perfect imaging” is not always “best listening”
---
#
Final Thought
I started with a system that sounded impressive but demanding.
I now have a system that sounds:
> **Balanced, engaging, and easy to live with**
---
If anyone is using Forte III or similar high-efficiency speakers, I highly recommend spending time on placement and small adjustments before changing gear.
Happy listening
It's been a long time I contributed anything on this esteemed forum with very informed enthusiasts. I did something with my system with the help of AI (Chat GPT) and gained a lot out of, so sharing a direct write up from the AI, if it could help others as well. I started with explaining my gear, room size and a photo of current placements, the gpt gave back a modified photo with new placement options to try. The result is as below.
Dialing in My Klipsch Forte III + Luxman System
#
* Speakers: Klipsch Forte III
* Amplifier: Luxman L-590AXII MkII
* DAC: Luxman DA-06
* Room: ~18 × 14 ft, false ceiling, carpet, curtains, couch
* Front wall: Mostly wooden (~10.7 ft center), ~17" concrete on each side
---
#
I started noticing a few things:
* Bass suddenly felt excessive (turned out to be loose speaker connection)
* Sound was **very sharp / slightly shrill at times**
* Imaging was **pinpoint accurate but too narrow**
* Sweet spot was extremely tight — had to sit exactly in center
* Sound felt **“in your face”** rather than layered
* Left/right separation was very strong, but sometimes unnatural
At that stage, everything sounded technically impressive—but not always enjoyable.
---
#
* Tightened speaker connections → bass normalized
* Confirmed placement symmetry
* Understood that Forte III are highly revealing and directional
---
#
This was the biggest change.
### Before:
* Speakers ~30" from side walls
* ~8.6 ft apart
* Listening distance ~11 ft
### Adjustments explored:
* Slight outward toe
* Increased listening distance
* Careful spacing relative to wooden wall
* Eventually settled around:
* ~8.5–8.7 ft spacing
* ~22–24" from front wall
* ~11 ft listening distance
---
#
* **Shrillness reduced significantly**
* Sound became **more relaxed and natural**
* Sweet spot widened noticeably
* Center image remained intact
* Listening fatigue dropped
---
#
What I learned:
* Wider spacing + more distance = less direct horn energy
* Slightly off-axis listening = smoother highs
* Room reflections (especially wood wall) started helping instead of hurting
---
#
After placement changes:
* Sound became **more centered and cohesive**
* Left/right separation moved slightly inward
* Stage felt less “etched” but more natural
Initially felt like I “lost separation,” but actually:
---
#
Goal:
> Keep width, regain layering, maintain center
Adjustments:
* Increased speaker distance from wall (22–24")
* Reduced excessive toe-out
* Tuned in **1-inch increments**
* Adjusted listening height slightly below horn axis
* Used wooden wall for mild diffusion instead of damping it
---
#
I realized something important:
Instead of blindly accepting or rejecting:
I created usage patterns:
### Presets I now use:
**1. Reference Mode**
* Tone OFF, Loudness OFF
**2. Relaxed Listening (daily use)**
* Bass +1
* Treble -1
**3. Low Volume**
* Loudness ON
**4. Old Recordings**
* Bass +1 or +2
* Treble -1 or -2
---
#
Now my system sounds:
* Wide but not exaggerated
* Centered but not stuck
* Layered (front–back depth improved)
* Smooth yet detailed
* Much less fatiguing
* Enjoyable across more seating positions
Most importantly:
> I listen longer and enjoy music more
---
#
1. **Speaker placement > gear upgrades**
2. 1-inch adjustments matter more than expensive cables
3. Horn speakers reward precise positioning
4. Tone controls are tools, not compromises
5. Room interaction defines final sound
6. “Perfect imaging” is not always “best listening”
---
#
I started with a system that sounded impressive but demanding.
I now have a system that sounds:
> **Balanced, engaging, and easy to live with**
---
If anyone is using Forte III or similar high-efficiency speakers, I highly recommend spending time on placement and small adjustments before changing gear.
Happy listening