Speaker Height / Tilt


What are the benefits / drawbacks of putting speakers on shorter stands and tilting the speaker up?  Do you run into phase and time alignment issues when tilting speakers?  
b_limo
Nope. The real issue is to align the tweeter or mid correctly relative to your head, and it's all subjective.

I find a lot of speakers sound better if I listen below the tweeter axis, and sometimes with the tweeters not pointed directly at me.


Now, to answer you more specifically, what you want to avoid is listening above the tweeter axis. That's where usually the phase and lobing issues you are thinking of occur.
In case anyone is wondering, here is my reply:

If you mean dome tweeters, nope, they are directional, eventually. Worse, some suffer from resonance on axis which is dealt with nicely off-axis.

Now, the issue next is lobing. That is, how the tweeter's response adds or subtracts from the next driver down (in frequency).

With traditional multi-way speakers with a tweeter on top, a mid or mid-woofer below it, the sound is pretty good to the sides and below, but not so good on top.

Take a look at figure five in this review. Notice that at 4 kHz or so there's a significant dip at 15 degrees above axis. It's a little hard to see, but the reviewer put the cross hairs right on it.

Now, compare that to the chart above it, figure 4. To the left and right the drop off is equal and smooth. Further, note how much the top octave drops off axis. This is normal, off center response for this type of tweeter.


@erik_squires so if the treble is currently excessive, which way do I tilt the speaker - away from my ears ie. up or towards my ears ie. down
On the vertical access, you would most likely toe them in toward the center to minimize the side wall reflections that toe out would give you...