Does something happen when speakers face each othe


I'm listening to 2 channel, but it seems to me that the 2 speakers in the rear are sucking out some midbass or something else from the front speakers. Is this possible?
allenstewart
Another thing to check out, if you have a separate amp or processor for the rear channels it may be inverting phase (or the front may be). If the electronics are shared between front and back this is not an issue.
Eldartford,

You may be correct in your experience, but an out-of phase pair of speakers that face each other (especially if close together) will cancel all of the duplicate information, leaving only the "difference" information.

Placing speakers out of phase and facing each other is an old trick that many people use when breaking-in a new pair of speakers. I've done it many times. You can turn up the volume much louder, but still get the same driver excursion because the duplicate sound is cancelled out.

Try it sometime if you want to see what I mean. Take your right and left speaker and place them facing each other. The closer the better (I usually have them about 1" apart). Reverse the wiring on only one speaker. It will produce a very much diminished sound. Oh yeah, if you can play in mono (the same signal to both speakers) it will be muted even more because there is no difference signal for each speaker, there would only be a duplicate signal. The duplicate "sound" is somewhat cancelled by the other driver that is moving in the opposite direction.

BTW, I don't really know why/how this is different from a speaker that is designed as a push/pull setup.

TIC
Yes, this is possible...even likely, if the rear speakers you mention are floorstanders. If this is the case, you have recreated and old room treatment tweak. The non-playing rear speakers are acting as bass traps.
Reubent...The difference is that I refer to speakers that are about 28 feet apart, whereas yours are one inch apart. 28 feet is half a wavelength for 20 Hz.