room makes or breaks


just a statement. i've been into this hobby for about eight years now, i adjusted and changed gear a good bit over the years. my last room was more long and about 14 foot wide, i recently moved and set up in a room about 20 foot wide and not as deep.
i am just amazed at how much better my system now sounds, speakers have vanished ,every aspect has improved, dont know if i lucked into a sweet spot, but the room has made a HUGE diff. im pleasantly blown away, like i bought a new system.
jrw40
IMO the “Elephant in the Room” as far as this Audio hobby is concerned is the room itself.

This can be seen by the Audiogon forum categories and number of posts represented as of today 08 17 2013.

Amps Preamps (26214)
Home Theater (5172)
Speakers (19407)
Digital (12500)
Analog (13103)
Cables (8581)
Music (5876)
Best of (941)
Tech talk (5150)
PC Audio (1730)
Audio Clubs (264)
Misc Audio (6441)
Disputes (98)

How do we find the numerous hints, tips, and advice that has been provided over the years on dealing with "the Room" by valued members?

A suggestion to the Audiogon staff.

Please add a category called “The Room” or something similar.

Cheers
I'm agreeing with Pops and all others who place the room as utterly imperative to great sound. I spent over 1.5 yrs building a dedicated listening room and it was absolutely the best "audio" purchase I have ever made. Stick with it. BTW a room can be "generically" improved...there are a lot of basics that are good for most/all types of systems. Good luck.
Agree with Ct0517. A'gon should add a "Room" category to its list of topics. My rig is located in a finished basement with weird dimensions and a low ceiling. It is carpeted and furnished, which may be a good thing. I'm sure much more can be done, but the room is so weird I'm not sure where to start. Would be kinda helpful IF there was a consultant in the area (Zip - 19096) who really knew what they were doing AND IF the wife would give me some license to make changes. That's 2 big IFs.
The room and the way the speaker interfaces with the room is more important than anything I've experienced in my 35 plus years of doing this. (Assuming you have decent equipment to begin with.) A properly treated room with a pair of upper level Vandersteen's, 5's and above, that will allow you to equalize the bass for room placement, is really hard to beat in my opinion. I'm sure there are other speakers that allow you to tune them for the room that would be equally good but I don't have experience with them.

The room can make a bigger difference than anything. Upgrading cables and equipment racks without addressing the room first seems like pure folly to me.