twoleftears wrote,
"I don’t remember the name of the guy (German? Austrian?), but he has videos on youtube.
Basically, his method is this: hook up just one speaker, and position it exactly where you will be *sitting*, right in front of your chair or move the chair and position it exactly where your ears will be. Play some music with some good bass. Get down on your hands and knees, and crawl around the approximate area where you’re planning to situate one of the speakers. Perhaps do a grid search. Find the exact position where you can hear most bass. Mark. Repeat, crawling around the other speaker position. Set everything up and enjoy.
On the face of it, this sounds intuitively right. What do people think?
(And you get a little exercise!)"
>>>The XLO speaker placement track will give the best results. Better than that method. Better than any trial and error approach. Optimizing one parameter (bass) ignores the other parameters such as frequency response (smoothness), coherence, soundstage depth and dynamics. Thus, you wind up with good bass at the expense of everything else, no? The XLO Track insures ALL audio parameters are optimized simultaneously. AND it does so regardless of room dimensions, room acoustic devices or lack thereof, etc. That’s why I frequently say that trying to find the ideal - the very best - locations by ear is a fool’s errand 😜 as one can never be sure he's found the very best locations. Plus once you change something in the room the locations you found are no longer valid anyway. Trial and error methods are like trying to solve X simultaneous equations in X + n unknowns. 😝

