Listening Room


Hello to all,

I think this is a situation many audiophiles find themselves in: That being your listening room is NOT a dedicated room that your expensive audio system resides in. You do NOT have a chair that is perfectly positioned in between speakers to optimize your listening enjoyment. Why? The room simply cannot accommodate a chair in the center or, most likely, your wife and/or significant other will not allow you to place a chair where it's supposed to be when listening.

Having said that, you listen to music from everywhere in the room. How does one go about speaker placement? How do you increase the sound stage? Are some speaker brands better than others when you do not have a dedicated listening room? Thanks for your input.

lovehifi22

@immatthewj

You must not be living in the same world I am, @audioguy85 .

I fear this will spiral into a political vortex quickly.

I have never see spending at this level, stores are full. restaurants are full, flights are full, and every 2 weeks there is a new Tesla on my street. At this rate, there will be nothing but Teslas soon.

@audioguy85

People just want your stuff for practically nothing nowadays.

I don’t have any experience as a seller, but I am thinking that must be nothing new.

Even tried selling things here. Had luck selling here years ago. The economy sucks.

From the posts I see here on this site on a regular basis, people are buying some pretty nice stuff frequently.

Wish I was in your utopia.

I don’t know about a utopia, but rates have been higher than they are now. All of my vehicles are over twenty years old, but that’s by choice, and every time I go to the grocery store (or just about everywhere) all I see are new cars on the road and in parking lots. I don’t have a dime in the stock market, but obviously there are a lot of people who do as the DJ is apparently touching 40k and the S&P is kicking tail. 401ks should be rocking and rolling. A house across the street from me sold a couple of years ago, and the buyer had a ton of work done (including an addition and a truly industrial size garage) and it’s not my business so I didn’t ask, but I can only assume that the ton of work cost a ton of money. My neighbor directly next door to me died in ’21 and in ’22 her son sold her house (and I do know what it went for, and I was surprised it went that high) and the buyer basically gutted it out and remodeled. He did a lot of the work himself, but still he had to buy materials and he did have an electrician over for many days. Personally, I thought the house was fine the way it was, and I wouldn’t have spent my money that way, but each to his or her own.

But I wouldn’t call any of the above "utopia," it just is what it is.

And on an edit: across the street next to the house that just got the garage and addition are an older retired gentleman and his daughter who is a teacher. I got to know them as they needed help with their dog starting last fall, and they both lease (I think) Nissans, and both of them had their lease run out at the same time early last spring and now they are both leasing brand new ones. (I am going over at 7pm to give them a quick hand with the dog, and I’ll double check what kind of his and her cars that they are.)

Back in ’05 I got laid off from being an airline mechanic, and I misread the future so I retrained as a RN, but I keep in touch with a buddy of mine, and recently they have a great contract going. If I would have seen that contract ever coming, I’d still be there.

. . . too late to get another edit in, but they are both Nissan Sentras. And I assume 2024s.

they both lease (I think) Nissans, and both of them had their lease run out at the same time early last spring and now they are both leasing brand new ones. (I am going over at 7pm to give them a quick hand with the dog, and I’ll double check what kind of his and her cars that they are.)

And thinking about it, once again adding on an edit, another across the street neighbor got into construction after he was laid off post 9/11 and he is always working. Which means to me that there must be a lot of builders who are building, and therefore I assume people must be buying. He rents, but that’s by choice best as I can tell, and he is driving a quite new F-250, so I can only assume that life, although it may not be a utopia, is going okay in his world.

 

High employment, rising wages, dropping inflation… which has been two or three times higher in the past, stock market making new highs. Sounds pretty good to me, and I’m retired. The US has the sixth highest income in the world, with only tiny countries in front of us. It has been a little while since I checked but i think saying over 6 billion people have income far below the US average income is pretty safe. Over half (over 3 billion people) make less than $7/day. I think we’re in pretty good shape.

Several years ago I built a special room added to my house for the purpose of giving lectures on classical music.  I built it to acoustic principles so it would also serve as a listening room.  I’ve not had the need for further treatments.