Goldenear Triton One bass setting


I believe my room requires a bass setting of around 11 o'clock position on the bass volume on the speaker.
Does someone have a scientific way to establish?  Can one use a test track and a decibel meter?
Thank you.
dcaudio
No need to be snarky. I'm not claiming superiority over you, so your audiophile manhood is safe.

What I am saying is that yes, I can hear when one speaker is not symmetrical to the other by several inches.  And if think you can't, you're not listening intently enough.

So don't signal me out. I bet most anyone you would care to ask in this forum would say the same thing. But hey, it's your system, so carry on............
So you are telling me that you can't hear that one speaker is EIGHT inches closer to you than the other speaker? But you can hear the difference between two interconnects?
Yup. Why are you so fixated on this?  Come by the house and have a listen if you like.  I have had a lot of people over, at least ten of them are members of our little community and no one ever said that the left channel sound arrived before the right.  Almost every audiophile who has heard my systems have nothing but praise.  Things like I never knew McIntosh sounded that good or I thought GE speakers were just for home theater. Never ever did anyone say there was a problem with the sound arriving at their ears  or that the sound is skewed.  If you haven’t heard the system, your criticism means nothing.  

dcaudio
 OP
74 posts
03-17-2020 6:33pm
"Is there a CD that has good frequency tracks and use a sound meter on my iPhone to measure to get a flat response?"

I gave up trying to adjust the various sub settings by ear and used a test CD (Stereophile STPH 002-2) with 1/3-octave warble test tones and the Decibel X app on my iPhone.