Lacement, Coustics, The wall behind the listener – MartinLogan Xstat Summit X User Manual

Page 10: The wall behind the speakers, The side walls, Listening position

Advertising
background image

10 Controls and Connection

By now your speakers should be placed approximately

two to three feet from the front wall (the wall in front of

the listening position) and at least two feet from the side

walls. Your sitting distance should be further than the dis-

tance between the speakers themselves. You are trying to

attain the impression of good center imaging and stage

width.

The correct distance between the speakers and listener is

related to the size and shape of your room. In long rooms

the distance between the speakers may be far less than

the distance from you to the speaker system. However,

in a wide room, you will still find that if the distance from

the listener to the speakers becomes smaller than the dis-

tance between the speakers themselves, the image will no

longer focus in the center.

Now that you have positioned your speaker system,

spend time listening. Wait to make any major changes for

the next few days. Over the first 72 hours of play the actu-

al tonal quality will change slightly with deeper bass and

more spacious highs resulting. After a few days of listening

you can make refinements and hear the differences.

The Wall Behind the Listener

Near-field reflections can occur from your back wall (the

wall behind the listening position). If your listening posi-

tion is close to the back wall, these reflections can confuse

imaging quality. It is better for the wall behind you to be

absorptive than to be reflective. If you have a hard back

wall and your listening position is close to it, experiment

with devices that absorb sound (i.e. wall hangings and

possibly even sound absorbing panels).

The Wall Behind the Speakers

The front surface, the wall behind the speakers, should

not be extremely hard or soft. A pane of glass will cause

reflections, brightness and confused imaging. Curtains,

drapery and objects such as bookshelves can be placed

along the wall to diffuse an overly reflective surface. A

standard sheet rock or textured wall is generally an ade-

quate surface if the rest of the room is not too bright and

hard. Walls can also be too soft. If the entire front wall

consists of heavy drapery, your system can sound dull.

You may hear muted music with little ambience. Harder

surfaces will actually help in this case.

The front surface should be one long wall without any

doors or openings. If you have openings, the reflection and

bass characteristics from each channel can be different.

The Side Walls

A good rule of thumb is to have the side walls as far away

from the speakers as possible. However, MartinLogan’s

unique controlled dispersion electrostatic transducer

inherently minimizes side wall reflections—a position

as little as two feet from the side walls often proves ade-

quate. Sometimes, if the system is bright or the imaging

is not to your liking, and the side walls are very near, try

putting curtains or softening material to the side of each

speaker.

P

laCement

and

r

oom

a

CoustICs

Listening Position

Figure 2 . Loudspeaker placement

2x

x

>24”

(>61cm)

>24”

(>61cm)

x

Advertising