Near field speaker setup


Hello!

I bought some LS-50 speakers and have them setup very close to my work table. The distance is about 5 1/2 feet apart tweeter to tweeter, around 3 1/2 feet - ear level with tweeters and I'm about 3 1/2 feet away, toe in 12 degrees.

What I want to know is, why does it sound so good this close? I hear a soundstage with the singer for example right in the middle, very detailed and instruments scattered around that sound spacious and detailed. I play at pretty low levels, maybe thats the key. If I move the speakers farther apart or move further away the effect I described fades. If anyone has a constructive comments on how to make it even better or confirm what Im hearing. Im just surprised how close I am.
I plan on trying a lot of different combinations, being stuck at home these days!

thanks for any feedback.

-Richard
128x128rgartner
Oh, and some isoacoustics under the LS50’s might help everything you already love about them 👍
Curious wha amp. are you using?  I have similar setup to yours, and am very impressed with the sound.  I’m using a class D ncore amp.  I think the LS 50’s sound especially good nearfield because of the coaxial drivers.  Other speakers I’ve tried in this configuration haven’t been as impressive.
I had exact experience with harbeth shl5 .
Amp can inlfuence such image which you described
Solid state top amps like luxman,technics,etc..from japan does this effect too
Near field listening,such as you have,eliminates room interaction. ( for the most part) 
My office, small bookshelf B&W with a sub in the middle, equidistant close triangle, direct sound prior to reflections, imaging is terrific. Big music system downstairs, bigger drivers, horns, bigger room, very nice imaging, but not as precise as my perfect close triangle upstairs.

I would encourage you to add a self-powered sub, not loud bass, just enough for bass extension, and a large benefit of self powered subs: removes the need for the smaller mains to try to do low bass, easier on the main amp not trying to do low bass also.

Many people make the mistake of going for too much bass, muddying up their mids.