Bass Response on Dunlavy SC-IVa


I purchases a pair of DAL SC-IVa about a month ago and have been trying find the best placement in a less than optimal room. My room is 21ft x 12Ft with cathedral ceiling starting at 8ft in the back to 12 ft in the front where the speakers are set up against the short wall. I know they should be set up against the long wall but the existing HT won't allow this. The speaker are 49" from the rear and 20" from the center of the cone to the side wall. I have carpeting on the floor and ther is a 5ft openning 11 ft from the front wall.

I have experiemented with many placements but just can't seem to get the bass to sound right.

Any suggestions ?

Thanks
mcreight
You make no mention of what affects you are hearing. I would assume it's an overly boomy bass with many peaks.

Regardless, you might consider bringing them out even further into the room, say another 2 feet from the back wall and perhaps another 6 or 8 inches in from the side walls.

-IMO
Are you adjusting your listening position as well as the speakers? I've found it best to work with each. Also, although many may not agree, you could actually space the speakers closer to the wall and compensate by doing some substantial toe in to reduce first reflections. You should also have a (Radio Shack) sould level meter and a (Rives) test disc to track your progress.
What type of floor do you have these on? What are the problems with low frequency reproduction that you are encountering? Any type of footer or support components between the cabinet and the floor? Sean
>
The problem is the variation in the reaction of the woofers to the floor and the ceiling. You have a large differential in boundary effects. The woofer on top is much further from the ceiling than the woofer on the bottom is from the floor. So you probably have a bass suckout of about 6db at 60 to 70 hz at ear height at your listening position. This is where much of the hit bass is on most recordings. Some geometric panels {and not soft} to act as a lens to refocus lost energy back at your chair would greatly enhance phase and frequency. Tom