fine tuning speaker placement


Just moved to a new home with a 22Lx14Wx10H ft room and trying to fine tune the speaker placement. Room is untreated. Speakers are Avalon Diamonds.

I first use a velodyne subwoofer test tone analyzer (only up to 200Hz). I moved the speakers around as I watch the frequency graph changes. Then I position the MIC in several possible seating posistion to find a seating position. Speakers ended up at 4ft 6inches from the front wall & 3ft 4inchnes from the side. I am sitting 3 ft from the rear wall

Next, i use a PAAA3 spectral analzer to check the 20-20Khz response and ended up with >10db narrow band suckout at 3.6Khz, the rest of the spectrum is resonable flat.

My questions:
1. Is there a spectral analyzer that generates a curve repeatedly on a screen similar to the velodyne unit but do the full spectrum? I find this more convenient as I can see the chnages on a graph while moving the speakers around.

2. Is it time to play with toe in to minimize the 3.6Khz null or should I treat the room? I am new to room treatments and is GIK package 3 a good place to start?

3. My measurements correlate well with the Cara simulation on Rives audio website. According to the simulation, another good location would be putting the speakers halfway into room. This is PITA because my speaker cables are not long enough and that means moving the rack, too. I am missing some midrange clarity and soundstage depth in comparing to putting the speakers 7ft from the front wall. However, the bass is very uneven.

4. The frequency response changes tremendously with tiny variation of head position (dist to rear wall). what do u use to position the mic precisely. Would the average of two meaurements ( one for each ear) be more accurate than one measurement betw the ears?

Many thanks
128x128glai
I would not sit 3 feet from the rear wall. I suspect those tiny variations you are seeing are from comb filtering from reflections from the rear wall.

Try sitting 6 feet from the back wall.
Consider that you are sitting way too far away from your speakers. Assuming that you have them firing them down length of the room you have them about 7'4" apart and your head(chair) is about 14' away. That will muddy up the mid's
and greatly reduce all aspects of imaging, especially sharpness.

I prefer an equalateral set up, but no more than 11 to 10 ration (speaker distance to chair/speaker distance to speaker).

Re the HF suck out: 1) Suck out if narrow enuf, say 1/4 octave or less will hardly be audible but if so it will be minimal sonically. You can not correct it by adding room acoustic treatments, but as you mentioned altering the toe in can change the FR as the horizontal dispersion of speakers is usually uneven and finding the magical position is usually best done by ear.

Assuming that your speakers are presently pointed straight ahead, you might find that toeing them in will reduce reflections from the side walls which will allow you to increase the spread between your speakers. In fact if you were willing to increase toe in until the axis crossed at or in front of your listening position, you might easly increase the spread to 9 to 10 ft without the lower octave FR changing much at all.

Re mic position I always use a hand held SPL meter with the mic pointed straight ahead and I position the mic where my head would be. I just chart everything on a graph for reference. I don't know of a reliable visual aid for the entire FR outside of some equalizers. BTW, FWIW, the Velodyne auto equalizer has a +/- resolution of 3db. So much for flat bass integration. Don't know how accurate their graph is. :-)

Only fools make recommendations in the blind, especially those who have never heard your speakers in your room, so here goes. Move your speakers out into the room to 66", move your listening chair out into the room to 66" and now move your speakers sideways until they are 2 ft from the side walls and cross the axis slightly ahead of you head's position while sitting in the chair. Don't measure anything, just put on a great disc and see how it sounds! Work from there, bass FR first and sound stage next.

Enjoy........(Great speaker set up is much more of an emperical process done by ear over a long period of time once you have some initial set up's via Rives Cara program, Cardas, what ever. They are at their best only starting points which are as often as not dissapointing.)
Frequency variation with small changes in position is normal in the high frequencies. If all you have is the 3.6 kHz dip, you're doing very well. The front and side wall spacing you've calculated should be working nicely for you. I doubt half way into the room will improve much. It will change your measurements, but will it improve? Only your ears can tell you that.

Unless I've done my math wrong, you're sitting 10' 8" from the speakers. You might try moving your listening position up 1 or 2 feet from the back wall (2' would put you at about the equilateral triangle position). This will increase the direct to reflected sound ratio and should improve both transients and clarity—not dramatically, but noticeably. You can experiment with toe-in from there. Sometimes a very slight toe-in is all it takes. Give yourself plenty of listening time with many different recordings. It may take some days or weeks before you get it settled.
By moving either the speakers into the room or the listening chair into the room, there will be a 10db suckout at 40-50Hz. However, the midrange and depth perception are better.

If I move to speakers with 13 inch woofers, would that allow me to move the speakers further into the room and fill in the 40-50Hz area?
I agree with all the trial and error suggestions above. I need to do the same with my Avalon Indras, which I recently purchased. If you do want to visualize your results though, and have a computer available, consider purchasing "TrueRTA" on the web and a behringer mic made for calibration (around $60 from Musician's Friend). You can use it to continuously generate pink noise and view your frequency response.
Size of the woofer shouldn't make a difference - it's the room & location that count. BTW I have a 40 and 50 hz suck out of 6db at 50hz, 5db at 40hz, but I'm flat at 60hz and 32hz and I had to fine tune speaker/chair locations to get it down this low. I started off at about 10db too. I think this was primarily due to my chairs location but I did have to move the speakers a bit too. This has existed in my room regardless of speakers, including electrostats and planers. That is a trade off that disturbes me not! The width, depth, and clarity issues (pin point imaging) that I get are just excellent. I see the suck out more on my graphs than I actually hear the result of it. :-)
Newbee

What else could overcome a suck out at lower HZ? Is a suck out the same as a null?

Before renovating my room my hump, bump, or issue in bass was noticed between 50 & 60hz, which I understand that at that point, it is a reflection of an issue at still lower hz, and continues on at double the freq... ie., 110, 220, etc. The on paper (theoretical or supposed) trouble spot is 52.3hz as I recall... based again, slely on physical dimensions only.

I ask as, well, this is my problem, but was wondering, perhaps what is happening with this threads posters room isn't the result of another problem taht began at a lower Freq, and culminates or is realized, further up the bandwidth?
Hi Blindjim and Glai, Try the Room Eq Wizard at the Home Theatre Shack. It is a free program that will show your in room freq response along with RT60m time and it will also generate waterfall plots, amongst other useful features. All that you need is a Radio Shack SPL meter, which you should own anyway.

Then you can post the results here.
Bob
Hi Newbee, you said,
"You can not correct it by adding room acoustic treatments",

Why would that be true?

And you also said "I don't know of a reliable visual aid for the entire FR outside of some equalizers."

The free program Room EQ Wizard at the Home Theater Shack. Now you know.

Bob
After a month, I finally got it to +/- 5db 20Hz to 16KHz. I also got a basic package from GIK.

It had the most to do with where I was sitting.

Many thanks for the help.
wow i feel mentally challenged after reading this post. I have a long way to go. Kevin
After a month, I finally got it to +/- 5db 20Hz to 16KHz. I also got a basic package from GIK.

It had the most to do with where I was sitting.

Many thanks for the help.

That is exceptionally flat. Well done.