Hey! That's a great explanation!Me too. So for us, that 1m has to be mean of the distance between a) speaker baffle and front wall and b) speaker baffle and cabinet front. Which might translate that 115cm to somewhere closer to or below 1 m for you.
I have been doing this crawl too - every few days. The challenge is my unreliable memory of the sound over time and trying to decide which I like better. My speakers are on a never ending journey (in spurts) within a small spaceIf I start with the speakers very close to the front wall and move them out bit by bit, then they sound best when the front baffle is 45 inches (115cms) from the front wall. Less than this they sound muffled, more than this they lose focus. Focus is regained at around 2.5 meters, but why should I pull them out so much at the cost of precious real estate?
In my case, I hit the optimum position only after trespassing the prohibited range of 1 -2.2m. So while the various recommendations may be fine in theory and good starting points, I think it is totally worth the effort, even if impractical, to do a speaker crawl.
Second that!Here is my take, I used to have small bookshelf speakers few years back at my flat, they used to sound tremendous in my small cozy rectangular room. I used to enjoy them everytime music played on them and i considered them one of the greatest speakers. They were advertised by the manufacturer to especially sound good while close to back wall or kept on a bookshelf. Here is quote from manufacturer website:
"For optimum performance, DALI MENUET should be positioned in a bookshelf or mounted on the wall using an optional wall bracket."
My story said otherwise. I felt that the speakers sounded best when kept on stands and 3 ft forward from front wall and around 6 ft apart in my room. Infact they sounded crap to me if i tried to wall mount them or keep them too close to walls in that room.
Now same speakers on same stands are now moved to my home town, which is a traditional house with high ceilings and rooms of square shape. I have tried them in different rooms within that house, I must say they dont entice that much even if i keep them few ft away from back walls. I tried many different placements, but they only perform at around 50% of what they used to be in my small room even though on stands. So with just changing of environment, a brilliant speaker can change into a average performer. Room is very important if someone takes his audio seriously.
@firearm12, thanks for sharing. The first half of your story tallies with my experience. About the bigger home town room, the Menuet are positioned as premium small speakers, meant for high sound quality in smaller spaces. Also square rooms are considered to be nightmare for speaker placement. Have you tried playing them with a sub?Here is my take, I used to have small bookshelf speakers few years back at my flat, they used to sound tremendous in my small cozy rectangular room. I used to enjoy them everytime music played on them and i considered them one of the greatest speakers. They were advertised by the manufacturer to especially sound good while close to back wall or kept on a bookshelf. Here is quote from manufacturer website:
"For optimum performance, DALI MENUET should be positioned in a bookshelf or mounted on the wall using an optional wall bracket."
My story said otherwise. I felt that the speakers sounded best when kept on stands and 3 ft forward from front wall and around 6 ft apart in my room. Infact they sounded crap to me if i tried to wall mount them or keep them too close to walls in that room.
Now same speakers on same stands are now moved to my home town, which is a traditional house with high ceilings and rooms of square shape. I have tried them in different rooms within that house, I must say they dont entice that much even if i keep them few ft away from back walls. I tried many different placements, but they only perform at around 50% of what they used to be in my small room even though on stands. So with just changing of environment, a brilliant speaker can change into a average performer. Room is very important if someone takes his audio seriously.
Second that!
@firearm I have fond memories of listening to your fabulous sounding system (Quad towers?) at your apartment. It may also be possible your ears are trained to this and find the smaller bookshelves wanting in their new and acosutically unfamiliar place?
@firearm12, thanks for sharing. The first half of your story tallies with my experience. About the bigger home town room, the Menuet are positioned as premium small speakers, meant for high sound quality in smaller spaces. Also square rooms are considered to be nightmare for speaker placement. Have you tried playing them with a sub?
I have paid a huge price to get this right. The huge price is having to listen to the same track again and again dozens of times. I never ever want to listen to Dire Straits "Ride across the river" again in my life.I have been doing this crawl too - every few days. The challenge is my unreliable memory of the sound over time and trying to decide which I like better. My speakers are on a never ending journey (in spurts) within a small spaceit’s fun once I reconciled myself there are many good spots to be discovered. So much to do, so little time...
Why Worry ?Dire Straits "Ride across the river" again in my life.
Absorber reduces reflection. So it’s like adding more space between the speaker and the wall (free space is also an absorber). Consequently lesser distance would be required IMO. But would absorbers change the sound too? Guess people have different views on that.Ever wondered what would be the effect of using absorbers behind the speakers to the distance from the front wall that the OP initially stated ?
Will an absorber behind the front speaker allow one to position the speakers closer to the front wall than a bare wall ?
What's your take ?
No..room treatment is used in all studios.But would absorbers change the sound too?
One would not know unless one tries..Guess people have different views on that.
@firearm12, I am wondering if toeing out the speakers could help in the squarish rooms at your home town. That might simulate a longer rectangular room. Have you tried it?
Ever wondered what would be the effect of using absorbers behind the speakers to the distance from the front wall that the OP initially stated ?
Will an absorber behind the front speaker allow one to position the speakers closer to the front wall than a bare wall ?
What's your take ?
Very true and is been practiced by many FMs here. Muddiness in Bass or mids reduces considerably if speaker gets breathing space. I remember, one of the whathifi shows had room issue one year and to achieve a good sound, some of the speakers were pulled in the middle of the room.In short wall distance from speakers affects sound quality and one has to set it to the best position.There’s nothing surprising in this. As you pull out the speakers,