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Jonnyozero3
07-12-2006, 08:43 PM
This is an odd question I thought of a long time ago but never asked. The .73 ratio mentioned in the Ascend manual for separating the stereo mains...where exactly do I measure from? Do I measure from the corresponding left/right sides of the speakers to determine the ".73" distance, or do I measure from the midpoint of the speaker enclosure? Does that make sense? I'm assuming I should measure from the center/midpoint of the drivers, but I thought I would check.

Silly question, I know. :)

PS: Yeah, I get in the tweaking mood now and then :p

curtis
07-12-2006, 08:48 PM
I just assume the midpoint of the speaker/driver.

I know it is only a guideline, but I always wondered how the suggestion of .73 came about.

Jonnyozero3
07-12-2006, 08:55 PM
Yeah, I think I assumed the sides of the speakers last time I tweaked placement because it's what worked better for my setup, lol. I'll have to go remeasure. I am so anal about this stuff...

Anyhow, I am also really curious how that ratio came about? Must have to do with the dispertion patterns and axial response right? This is one of those times I'd love to have Dave's personal design notes to read :)

azanon
07-13-2006, 08:06 AM
What should the ratio be in the case of a phantom center? The same? Lower? (closer together).

Jonnyozero3
07-13-2006, 09:45 AM
I don't know, but I'd venture a guess that if the .73 ratio gets you the best stereo image, then it would work best for the phantom center as well. But I don't really know... :o

davef
07-13-2006, 07:30 PM
Hi Guys,

Good discussion here... and I am happy to contribute.

The .73 multiplier is really just simple geometry. Multiplying the distance you are seated from the midpoint between the speakers by .73, yields a recommended separation distance between the left / right speakers that places each speaker at a corresponding 20 degree off-axis angle from you. Combining that with the 5 degree toe-in angle I generally recommend and each speaker will be at an off-axis angle of 15 degrees. The range of 0 through 15 degrees off-axis yields the most accurate response from the loudspeaker.

The .73 multiplier is the simplest way to determine the maximum separation distance between the left/right speaker that will position the listener within the most ideal listening window.

Note: in this example, the distance between the speakers is measured from center to center (typically, tweeter to tweeter)

Of course, this is just a rule of thumb but it is a very good starting point.

Hope this helps!

Jonnyozero3
07-13-2006, 08:51 PM
Great info. Thank you, Dave. You covered all my questions :)

Grayson73
07-13-2006, 09:05 PM
If distance from listening position to center between L/R is 10 feet, the L and R should be 7.3 feet apart?

Jonnyozero3
07-14-2006, 11:42 AM
7.3 ft tweeter to tweeter, yup.

nickmo
08-14-2009, 10:48 AM
Since I've moved into my new house in May I have been unable to set up my Sierras properly due to a number of factors(money, newly crawling baby, etc.,...). Before last night I had my front three Sierras sitting on the edge of a long (~5') low (~14") coffee table about two feet away from the wall. There was less than two and a half feet between the center and either of the L/R speakers. I found that center channel dialog was almost impossible to understand, and I was always bumping up the the center channel volume +5-6 in order to hear it clearly. Of course this made any effects coming from the center channel uncomfortably loud. So last night before watching RocknRolla on Blu Ray I moved my right channel on to the top of my Rythmik D15 which sits in the front corner of my room. WHAT A HUGE DIFFERENCE!!!!!:D Dialog was clear, effects panned across the front soundstage so much better, I was grinning the whole movie.
Then this morning I swing by the forums and do a search for speaker placement and find this thread. I sit ten feet from my speakers so according to the .73 rule of thumb my speakers should be 7'4" apart for best imaging. I just measured them in their new locations and it came out to 7'2" tweeter to tweeter. Amazing. Really I can't do the increase in sound quality justice with my description. WOW!

BarryG
08-17-2009, 05:16 PM
Interesting discussion! I've been doing some careful listening to my Sierras and finding the speaker separation fairly critical to achieve proper imaging of a chorus of voices that are spread across the soundstage. I've been listening to the DVD-Audio of Gaucho (superb stereo recording!) and finding that the imaging really snaps in with a slightly smaller ratio of about .65 - just offering this as one more data point. I wonder if this ratio is dependent on the recording . . .

curtis
08-17-2009, 05:24 PM
I would think it is more dependent on the room.

scape
08-18-2009, 07:47 PM
beat me to it, curtis!
i agree, room acoustics plays a massive part in all this; my last apartment was drywall, carpet, and mostly wide-rectangular. i ended up with near 10ft apart and 8 feet distance maybe? the place before that was concrete, and 8 apart and 10 away, long-rectangular with big open space behind my seating... my new place has them 15 ft apart due to furniture and 10 ft distance, not very ideal; but still sounds delicious to me, tho a tad under powered for the 170's. I have decided to simply drop center channel altogether-- I never liked how the speaker was lower or higher than the TV (if I had a projector I'd probably find a way to play it right through the screen). anyways, no room is the same and ALL factors should be considered, including your how you prefer it to sound vs numerical accuracy!-- but like Dave said, it is probably a good starting point

davef
08-20-2009, 03:06 PM
I would think it is more dependent on the room.

Also dependent on the monitor positioning used during mastering. I have always thought it would be "cool" if they would print on the CD/DVD various technical details of the mix (such as monitor distances, which monitors were used etc.)

curtis
08-21-2009, 09:08 AM
That would be very cool!

dustwvl
08-21-2009, 09:58 AM
My question is what is the better compromise. Being closer to this ratio but being closer to the side wall (about 6" to 10") or being farther away from the side walls to reduce first reflections but be closer together. I am sure it is probably just a try both and see thing.

davef
08-24-2009, 01:03 AM
My question is what is the better compromise. Being closer to this ratio but being closer to the side wall (about 6" to 10") or being farther away from the side walls to reduce first reflections but be closer together. I am sure it is probably just a try both and see thing.

Simple enough to play around with. Whatever sounds best is always the best compromise :)

InstantEulogy
09-07-2009, 01:35 AM
A .73 ratio measured from the center point between L/R to the listener? To me, and many other ears- that's just not enough space between the left and the right speakers to create a full soundstage. Keeping within a 15 degree axis between you and the L/R speakers, you can still seperate the speakers to a near 100% ratio. Say you sit 90 inches away measured from the woofer to the listener, then measure 90 inches between the left and right speaker. Toe them in so they come to a point about 24 inches behind your head. That will put you at an equilateral distance between all 3 points and keep you within the recommend angles to the speakers. An equilateral triangle setup, with a toe-in angle pointing just beyond the back of your head, is the most common way to setup a good stereo image. Just my 2 cents.

Edit: I don't know where I got my math from ;). But the wider the L/R get, the more extreme of an angle you will have to have them pointed towards you to create a good center image. But this is different than the 15 degree axis... Dave... what are your thoughts on this? Dolby and DTS both recommend an equilateral triangle for front L/R speakers with a near 45 degree angle toe-in.