The extra “tweak, Enjoy yourself, Your room – MartinLogan Xstat Summit X User Manual

Page 12: Terminology

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12 Placement

good pinpoint focusing. Your ideal listening position

and speaker position will be determined by:

• Tightness and extension of bass response

• Width of the stage

• Pinpoint focusing of imaging

Once you have determined the best of all three of these

considerations, you will have your best speaker location.

The Extra “Tweak”

This extra “tweak” may be useful when your speakers

are placed in a dedicated listening room. Use the fol-

lowing procedure and measurements for your speakers

placement to see what can happen to your system’s per-

formance. These formulas will help determine optimum

placement of your speakers to minimize standing waves.

1 Distance from the front wall (in front of the listening

position) to the center of the curvilinear transducer: To

determine distance from the front wall, measure the

ceiling height (inches) and multiply the figure by 0.618

(i.e. ceiling height (inches) x 0.618 = the distance from

the front wall to the center of the curvilinear transducer).

2 Distance from the side-walls to the center of the cur-

vilinear transducer: To determine distance from the

side walls, measure the width of your room in inches

and divide by 18. Next, multiply the quotient by 5 (i.e.

room width in inches / 18 x 5 = the distance from the

side-walls to the center of the curvilinear transducer).

Enjoy Yourself

The Summit X is a very refined speaker and benefits from

care in setup. With these tips in mind you will find, over

your months of listening, that small changes can result in

measurable differences. As you live with your speakers,

do not be afraid to experiment with their positioning until

you find the optimal relationship between your room and

speaker system that gives to you the best results. Your

efforts will be rewarded.

Your Room

This is one of those areas that requires both a little back-

ground to understand and some time and experimentation

to obtain the best performance from your system.

Your room is actually a component and an important part

of your system. This component is a very large variable

and can dramatically add to, or subtract from, a great

musical experience.

All sound is composed of waves. Each note has its own

wave size, with the lower bass notes literally encompass-

ing from 10’ feet to over 40’ feet. Your room participates

in this wave experience like a three dimensional pool with

waves reflecting and becoming enhanced depending on

the size of the room and the types of surfaces in the room.

Remember, your audio system can literally generate all of

the information required to recreate a musical event in

time, space, and tonal balance. Ideally, your room should

not contribute to that information. However, every room

does contribute to the sound to some degree. Fortunately

MartinLogan has designed the Summit X to minimize

these anomalies

Let’s talk about a few important terms before we begin.

Terminology

Standing Waves

The parallel walls in your room will reinforce certain notes

to the point that they will sound louder than the rest of

the audio spectrum and cause “one note bass”, “boomy

bass” or “bloated bass”. For instance, 100Hz represents a

10 feet wavelength. Your room will reinforce that specific

frequency if one of the dominant dimensions is 10 feet.

Large objects in the room such as cabinetry or furniture

can help to minimize this potential problem. Some seri-

ous “audiophiles” will literally build a special room with

no parallel walls just to help eliminate this phenomenon.

Reflective Surfaces (near-field reflections)

The hard surfaces of your room, particularly if close to your

speaker system, will reflect some waves back into the room

over and over again, confusing the clarity and imaging of

your system. The smaller sound waves are mostly affected

here, and occur in the mid and high frequencies. This is

where voice and frequencies as high as the cymbals occur.

Resonant Surfaces and Objects

All of the surfaces and objects in your room are subject to

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