You might be right about the near field experience with Vandys. Stick with what worked in the past.
If it isn't broken - do not fix it.
Mariusz
If it isn't broken - do not fix it.
Mariusz
Vandersteen 5A room placment options
Mrjstark, That's my thought exactly. I think I may be just looking for feedback, so I can put the idea to rest. Nice looking room, looks as if you are getting the most out of it. What are the dimensions, and what type of room treatments are you using. It is't broken for sure, so nothing to fix. Just trying to get the most out of my system. I do remember two previous speakers with smaller footprints that seemed to open up a bit more in my room. Hey, perhaps the Quattro would have been a better choice in a 12 + foot wide room. Thanks. |
The room is in the "L" shape. The Quatros are in the smaller "cove" which is a bit more then just 9' wide. It opens up to the rest of the room , which is 15' wide. The length of the room is about 19'. Not the easiest room to work with but I am not complaining. Room treatments are the combination of diffusers , absorbers and bass traps. (picture panels, Echo Basters bass phase4 traps X 2, Skyline diffusers X 4, and last but not least the cork wall tiles (natural finish - not a gloss finish. Important) on front sub-wall and back wall (100%). * not all are visible. This is the room from few months back. I must update the system gallery. To lazy I guess.:) I hope it helps Mariusz |
Fjn, I have just finished building a dedicated room which is somewhat similar to yours and have spent the last couple of weeks measuring room acoustics and experimenting with locations for my Vandy 5As. I chose to configure the room to the Fibonacci ratios (8H, 13W, 21L) since my research convinced me they are a very good approach to minimizing room modes. Assuming your ceiling is around 8H, you are within a foot or so of these ratios as well. I found the best speaker location for both imaging and bass response to 5ft from the listener front wall and 3 ft from the side walls. Incidently, it turns out this also completes the Fibonacci ratio of 3, 5, 8, 13, 21. I have the listening chair 38% of the distance out from the listener rear wall. This puts the speakers 7 ft apart and about 9 ft from the listening chair. I have the speakers towed in to aim at the center of the listener rear wall. The good news is it has worked for me with great imaging and acoustic measures showing a very smooth bass response of +/- 5 db from 30hz to 200 hz. If you feel like experimenting, and you don't have other room limitations not yet revealed, you might consider trying this approach. I would suggest you try 2.5 ft off the side walls as well to give as much separation between the speakers as possible (I have found the 5As seem to work best at around 8 ft in general, but couldn't quite get there in this current room. I also tried the 1/3rd, 1/5th and 1/7th placement method recommended by Richard V., but found the locations above to be noticably better for my room. Getting the speakers closer to the front wall also gave me more space behind my chair for media storage, a record cleaner, and some cabinets. |