Speaker Help Required


I have a 12'x14' living room with a cathedral ceiling.

My 2-channel audio system is along the 12' back wall. I have a 6.5' audio / video rack which houses all my audio gear (mostly Linn) with a bookshelf speaker (Linn Katan) at each side of this rack (roughly 7.5' apart) sitting on stands (Linn Katan stands). The left speaker is about 3' from the side wall and 2' from the back wall with a powered subwoofer (Linn Sizmik 10.25) between the left speaker and the side wall in the corner. The right speaker is also 2' from the back wall but no side wall since it is an opening to my hallway.

Because of this setup, I’m hearing more of the left speaker than the right speaker. I tried different amounts of toe-in, which seems to help a little but I’m still not 100% satisfied. Some people have suggested that since the Katan are very small speakers, the subwoofer is not only providing the added bass but may be participating in some midrange too which is why I’m hearing more of the left channel.

Since I cannot move things around in my living room nor add a door to the hallway opening, I’m looking for a pair of “full range” floorstanding speakers to replace my bookshelves / subwoofer combo in hopes of rectifying this problem. Also, my wife is totally opposed to any “room insulation / sound proofing” idea since we use this room for entertaining friends and family and the décor is her territory.

What floorstanding speakers would you recommend for a $2000-$2500 budget that will help with my issue?
agiaccio
BTW the bass buster is 4' tall and -in cross section - is shaped like 1/4 of a circle (fat wedge of pie). The flat sides are each 9" deep and they snug up to the walls forming the corner. There are about 100 colors available - so you may want to check the echo buster web site before concluding that the wife wil nix the idea.

Marty
Maybe try placing a plant stand or some other item in the corner first to see if damping the corner solves the problem before dropping $350 on a high priced sonic obstacle.
Map, IME it's the rare plant / plant stand that's meaningfully absorptive in
specifically this region (or any region, actually, although they can be effective as
dispersion tools) These devices aren't gimmicks. That most analytical of a-
philes, John Atkinson, has written pretty extensively on why these treatments are
among the most effective tools available to the listener and he details the
physics involved for those who might be interested. OTOH, a plant might do
the trick and there's no arguing the price advantage!

Marty
Hey guys - I think Agiaccio's problem is obvious, even though he is complaining more of balance than anything else.

What does a woofer in a corner do? It booms! In fact I'm ammazed that his compllaint was not about boom, or excessive energy anyway below 100 hz. IMHO it is the worst place for a music oriented audiophile wants a sub. HT is a different thing.

What he notices is the woofers contribution to the left speakers upper bass/lower mid range which creates an imbalance toward the left side. Move the sub woofer out of the corner and the problem will probably disappear and restore balance.

If he can put the woofer on the long wall somewhere, or in the center between the speakers somewhere, or behind the speakers somewhere, I'd bet the bass tightens up and the imbalance goes away. That is a guess based on probabilities, but if I'm right he doesn't have to spend a lot of money on bass traps etc. And if he can't move the sub woofer, I think he is right in his inclination to just put the sub in the garage and get floor standers.

I should have been more specific in my first response. Sorry 'bout that Agiaccio
Hey guys - I think Agiaccio's problem is obvious, even though he is complaining more of balance than anything else.

What does a woofer in a corner do? It booms! In fact I'm ammazed that his complaint was not about boom, or excessive energy anyway below 100 hz. IMHO it is the worst place for a music oriented audiophile who wants/needs a sub. HT is a different thing - those folks like boom. :-).

What he notices is the sub woofers contribution to the left speakers upper bass/lower mid range which creates an imbalance toward the left side. Move the sub woofer out of the corner and the problem will probably disappear and restore balance.

If he can put the woofer on the long wall somewhere, or in the center between the speakers somewhere, or behind the speakers somewhere, I'd bet the bass tightens up and the imbalance goes away. That is a guess based on probabilities, but if I'm right he doesn't have to spend a lot of money on bass traps etc. And if he can't move the sub woofer, I think he is right in his inclination to just put the sub in the garage and get floor standers.

I should have been more specific in my first response. Sorry 'bout that Agiaccio