This in combination with your other post clearly points to a room problem. B&W 802 D diamonds measure flat down to about 33 Hz in an anechoic chamber. Your room/speaker interaction is the root cause of your problems. See my post to your first question.
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@billstevenson +1 Where the listening spot is affects perception of bass. Move the speakers closer to or right up against the wall. You probably have them too far out into the room. |
well physics of sound in room is what is happening. you're having what is called exciting of room modes and room nulls. those are not something you can escape so maybe the SBIR related dips are a lot in your room. you can only know this by sweeping sine wave from 20Hz to 20kHz or using a measurement mic and Room EQ Wizard to take RTA of your room form your seated position. There should be big dips @onehorsepony |
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I have my speakers out from the front wall 24", 8' apart and 4' from the side walls. Soundstage is very 3-dimensional. When I push the speakers closer to the front wall, say 6", the bass is improved and the tweeter energy sounds toned down. However, I do lose the soundstage. Someone, in one of my posts insisted that my preamp and amplifiers are not a good match for my speakers. Can anyone elaborate as to why?
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