GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Ask Me" Archives

...to May 18, 2006

 

Stands for floorstanding speakers?

May 18, 2006

I have a pair of Monitor Audio speakers. I was thinking about getting a set of stands to raise them up. They are floorstanding speakers, but the tweeter seems quite low. I’m looking for better highs and wonder if this might help.

Shaun

Probably not a good idea. If the speakers are a floorstanding design, then they have been engineered to be the correct height for a seated listener. Raising them up on stands would alter the tweeter axis’s relationship with the listener considerably, and that would likely throw off the sound, not in a good way. A better alternative is to experiment with toe-in -- angle the speakers to directly face the listening position and listen, then move them outward a bit and listen again. Note how the highs change as you angle the speakers away from you. This may help you attain a more acceptable balance in the highs. As well, if you have absorptive furniture between you and the speakers -- chairs, an ottoman -- removing/moving them will affect high-frequency performance. So move the furniture a bit and see what happens to the sound. Let me know how it works out.


Downward-firing or front-firing subwoofer?

May 15, 2006

Is there a difference between the bass created by downward-firing versus front-firing subwoofers? Should I look into one over the other for a home-theater setup?

Tim

Scientifically speaking, I’m not sure that one type of subwoofer loads a room with bass any differently than the other. Perhaps since the bass driver on the downward-firing subwoofer is closer to a room boundary, it may elicit slightly more room gain. What I can tell you, however, is that a front-firing subwoofer pointed directly at the listener is easily localizable. This is caused when it is crossed over so high that midrange information is being reproduced by the subwoofer, and because it is pointed at the listener, directional frequencies are heard quite easily. By comparison, any midrange information coming from a downward-firing subwoofer is absorbed or diffused by the floor. The other side is that some listeners prefer a front-firing subwoofer because it produces punchier midbass -- higher-than-bass frequencies that need correct directionality for impact with the listener. I’ve heard these rules of thumb both supported and proven incorrect with various products, but I’d say they are good general explanations.


Phantom center setting?

May 10, 2006

My receiver does not have a function in the menu for a phantom center channel. Am I missing something or is there just no way to do this with my receiver? Will turning off the center speaker accomplish the same thing?

R.J.

You’re correct about turning off the center speaker. Doing this will re-route all of the center-channel information to the left and right front speakers, creating a phantom center channel. There is no setting within your receiver beyond this that accomplishes that configuration.


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