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Speaker height above floor.
As most will know, speakers like the Spendor BC1 sound horrid if placed on
the floor. Raising them on a stand with air between the floor and the speaker sorts out the bass end nicely. In practice, the stand height places the tweeter roughly on line to the ear when sitting down. But is there a formula for the ideal distance from floor to speaker based on cabinet volume or whatever? Or is it just 'enough' and more makes no difference? -- *Keep honking...I'm reloading. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Speaker height above floor.
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in
message ... As most will know, speakers like the Spendor BC1 sound horrid if placed on the floor. Raising them on a stand with air between the floor and the speaker sorts out the bass end nicely. In practice, the stand height places the tweeter roughly on line to the ear when sitting down. But is there a formula for the ideal distance from floor to speaker based on cabinet volume or whatever? Or is it just 'enough' and more makes no difference? Speaker height was always regarded as that necessary to place the speakers at ear level when in the listening position. Agree about the BC1 - but still a very warm speaker. -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
Speaker height above floor.
On 23/01/2014 12:38 AM, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
As most will know, speakers like the Spendor BC1 sound horrid if placed on the floor. Raising them on a stand with air between the floor and the speaker sorts out the bass end nicely. In practice, the stand height places the tweeter roughly on line to the ear when sitting down. But is there a formula for the ideal distance from floor to speaker based on cabinet volume or whatever? Or is it just 'enough' and more makes no difference? **No. It is entirely dependent on the whim of the designer. Most (sane) designers organise things such that the HF driver is close to normal ear level. Some deigners place the bass driver close to the floor to obtain 'room gain'. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
Speaker height above floor.
"Woody" Speaker height was always regarded as that necessary to place the speakers at ear level when in the listening position. ** One notable thing about the human head is that the eyes and the ears are at the same level. With most speakers, the tweeters are the predominant source for sound location - so they set the width and height ( above the floor) of the sound stage. Most folk like the sound stage to be right in front of them when seated in the middle of a stereo pair, as it helps them imagine the performance. Same goes for TV and cinema screens too. Eye level is the thing you set tweeters at. ..... Phil |
Speaker height above floor.
On 22/01/2014 13:38, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
As most will know, speakers like the Spendor BC1 sound horrid if placed on the floor. Raising them on a stand with air between the floor and the speaker sorts out the bass end nicely. In practice, the stand height places the tweeter roughly on line to the ear when sitting down. But is there a formula for the ideal distance from floor to speaker based on cabinet volume or whatever? Or is it just 'enough' and more makes no difference? Speakers can be quite directional at the mid/top crossover frequency if the two drivers are too far apart, and they might be better tilted back a bit. Not as bad as listening to ESL57s and moving your head 6" to one side but there might be a difference. And of course if you have a party you need taller stands to put the tweeters at ear level when standing up. I'm puzzled why some manufacturers put the tweeter diagonally to the same side of the midrange on both speakers of a pair. It blurs the soundstage. -- Eiron. |
Speaker height above floor.
Yes that is a strange thing to do, even my old Dentons are mirror images.
Maybe they never intended them to be the way up many put them for many speakers. I have one bass speaker to help make it extend lower, but the effect is very location dependent. In an experiment recently it actually sounded better out in the hall!. Not entirely practicle i grant you. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Eiron" wrote in message ... On 22/01/2014 13:38, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: As most will know, speakers like the Spendor BC1 sound horrid if placed on the floor. Raising them on a stand with air between the floor and the speaker sorts out the bass end nicely. In practice, the stand height places the tweeter roughly on line to the ear when sitting down. But is there a formula for the ideal distance from floor to speaker based on cabinet volume or whatever? Or is it just 'enough' and more makes no difference? Speakers can be quite directional at the mid/top crossover frequency if the two drivers are too far apart, and they might be better tilted back a bit. Not as bad as listening to ESL57s and moving your head 6" to one side but there might be a difference. And of course if you have a party you need taller stands to put the tweeters at ear level when standing up. I'm puzzled why some manufacturers put the tweeter diagonally to the same side of the midrange on both speakers of a pair. It blurs the soundstage. -- Eiron. |
Speaker height above floor.
"Eiron" Speakers can be quite directional at the mid/top crossover frequency if the two drivers are too far apart, and they might be better tilted back a bit. Not as bad as listening to ESL57s and moving your head 6" to one side but there might be a difference. ** Huh?? The treble, mid and bass panels on an ESL57 are concentric, vertical strips. Of course the virtual image shifts IF you shift - that is how stereo works. And of course if you have a party you need taller stands to put the tweeters at ear level when standing up. ** Really ? There is simply no sound stage or virtual image to be had when folk are milling about, boozing and chatting. Makes Bose 901s the perfect party speakers. ..... Phil |
Speaker height above floor.
In article ,
Trevor Wilson wrote: on cabinet volume or whatever? Or is it just 'enough' and more makes no difference? **No. It is entirely dependent on the whim of the designer. Most (sane) designers organise things such that the HF driver is close to normal ear level. Some deigners place the bass driver close to the floor to obtain 'room gain'. With the BC1, the quality of the bass seems to change dramatically if it's on the floor. More quality than gain? Hence the question in case there was more to it. -- *Why is the third hand on the watch called a second hand? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Speaker height above floor.
In article ,
Eiron wrote: Speakers can be quite directional at the mid/top crossover frequency if the two drivers are too far apart, and they might be better tilted back a bit. Not as bad as listening to ESL57s and moving your head 6" to one side but there might be a difference. So as a rule, midrange and tweeter need to be as close as possible? -- *Santa Claus has the right idea. Visit people only once a year. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Speaker height above floor.
In article , Eiron
wrote: On 22/01/2014 13:38, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: I'm puzzled why some manufacturers put the tweeter diagonally to the same side of the midrange on both speakers of a pair. It blurs the soundstage. I guess it saves them the bother of having to make mirror pairs whilst allowing them to tweak any effects due to cabinet edge scatter. Perhaps a sign that they aren't that bothered about stereo image. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
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