As @tmuikku has suggested in various posts/threads I spent this afternoon listening to musical selections and test tracks at different positions around the room. Room is 19'2"W x 24'D x 8.5'H and purpose built/professionally designed. Front baffle of the speakers are 3'6" from the front wall and center of the drivers are 4'6" from the side walls. Here is what I heard...
TL;DR--
In front of the speakers...
Moving from the plane 3' in front of the speakers to the back wall of the room; position remained centered between the L/R speakers. Note: I did not adjust toe-in or the listening triangle for these tests which likely alters some perceptions of focus and width.
At all positions in front of the speakers:
Behind the speakers...
At no time while listening behind the speakers was I ever able to localize sound to a speaker, and the experience was always "watching from the outside" (i.e. no envelopment).
Anywhere behind the plane of the speakers but between the L/R the speakers:
The experience was the same in both corners so I'll share the experience from behind the right speaker.
TL;DR--
- Was surprised to discover that volume and reverb related depth cues, while subtle experiences in general, were persistently perceptible at every location tested in the room
- From anywhere behind the speakers and at the rear wall of the room, the experience is "watching from outside"
- In/out of phase differences were audible in all locations tested EXCEPT for the front corners behind the speakers were I had zero ability to hear differences in phase.
- Left and right cues were audible behind the speakers and located between the L/R speakers, but left and right essentially disappeared, or even reversed, when listening in the corners behind the speakers.
- When standing near the front of the room depth was extremely compressed, as I moved further and further back in the room, the sense of depth stretched to fill the room, giving a maximal perception of depth at the rear wall
- There is a subtle transition from "watching from the outside" to "you are there" as the distance from the speakers increases; at the rear wall the sensation of "watching from the outside" returns (perhaps a lack of late reflections from behind?).
- Was pleased to discover that both focus and envelopment were essentially maximized at the MLP (not a surprise considering it is a purpose built and engineered room).
In front of the speakers...
Moving from the plane 3' in front of the speakers to the back wall of the room; position remained centered between the L/R speakers. Note: I did not adjust toe-in or the listening triangle for these tests which likely alters some perceptions of focus and width.
At all positions in front of the speakers:
- Left and right cues are extremely obvious
- Depth cues are clearly perceived
- In-phase and out-of-phase sounds are extremely obvious.
- The experience is in between "you are there" and "watching from the outside" with reverb and sounds out to ~70 degrees left and right (probably not far from the position of the L/R speakers)
- Depth cues are compressed, as-if the entire playback happens in a space only 5' deep (even with eyes closed trying to imagine more depth)
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test tracks involving front to back movement is minimal
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be 2-3' across
- Out of phase pink noise is inside the head
- The experience is in between "you are there" and "watching from the outside" with reverb and sounds out to ~70 degrees left and right
- Depth cues are compressed, as-if the entire playback happens in a space only 6-8' deep (even with eyes closed trying to imagine more depth)
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test track involving front to back movement is still small
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be ~2' across
- Out of phase pink noise is outside the head but only as wide as the L/R speakers and positioned in front of the listener
- The experience is in between has just barely become "you are there" with reverb and sounds out to ~80-90 degrees left and right
- Depth cues are larger, as-if the entire playback happens in a space 15'-20' deep
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test track involving front to back movement is still getting larger
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be ~2' across
- Out of phase pink noise is outside the head and wider than the speakers but in the same plane as or just in front of the listener
- Other stereo sounds now come from outside the speakers as well
- The experience is solidly 'you are there' with reverb and sounds out to 80-110 degrees left and right
- Depth cues are clearly perceived
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test track involving front to back movement is large
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be between the size of a basketball and a beachball; real world mono music is a bit smaller (perhaps due to the limited bandwidth of the selection). This is the point of maximum focus without adjusting the listening triangle or toe-in.
- Note: If speaker toe-in is increased the sound is reduced to the size of a large softball.
- Out of phase pink noise is the width of the room and experienced to my left and right and even slightly behind
- The experience is solidly 'you are there' with reverb and sounds out to 80-110 degrees left and right
- Depth cues are clearly perceived
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test track involving front to back movement is very large
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be ~6' across (focus has rapidly declined);
- Out of phase pink noise is the width of the room and experienced to my left and right and even slightly behind
- The experience returns to slightly "watching from the outside" with reverb and sounds out to ~80 degrees left and right
- Depth cues are clearly perceived
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test track involving front to back movement is massive and perception of depth is the whole length of the room (and then some)
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be ~10' across (fills the entire space between the L/R speakers);
- Out of phase pink noise is the width of the room but slightly in front of me
Behind the speakers...
At no time while listening behind the speakers was I ever able to localize sound to a speaker, and the experience was always "watching from the outside" (i.e. no envelopment).
Anywhere behind the plane of the speakers but between the L/R the speakers:
- The room is perceived to be completely filled with sound
- Left and right cues are audible but far less pronounced
- Depth cues based on volume and reverb are still perceived, but now the deepest sounds are at the back of the room (depth is reversed)
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test track involving front to back movement is somewhat ambiguous but proceeds from the back-ish area of the room up to nearly the plane of the speakers (give or take a foot)
- In-phase and out-of-phase sounds are still clearly identifiable, but less pronounced
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be ~8-10' in diameter
- Out of phase pink noise is the width of the room ('19 and mostly hollow in the middle)
- When moving left and right between the speakers the central image followed my movements with no discernable change in relative positioning or timbre
- First time I've ever experienced a sweet-spot that was wider than a single seat (or more correctly, an absolute absence of a sweet spot?)
The experience was the same in both corners so I'll share the experience from behind the right speaker.
- The perception of sound is mostly limited to the front third of the room and closer to far (left) speaker
- Left and right cues are--for any practical purposes--inaudible
- Depth cues are still perceived, but now the deepest sounds are at the left wall about a third of the way from the front of the room
- Interestingly, while standing in the corner behind the right speaker, when a sound was moving deeper and deeper behind the right speaker (when heard from the MLP), I perceived it is moving away from me and into the 1/3 point of the left wall
- Range of movement during microphone configuration sample test track involving front to back movement is still clearly audible but also somewhat ambiguous and limited. What movement can be perceived moves from the left wall up to maybe 5' in-front of me at the closest
- In-phase and out-of-phase sounds are entirely unidentifiable
- Stereo-mono pink noise is perceived to be ~6' in diameter; real world mono music is a bit smaller (perhaps due to the limited bandwidth of the selection).
- Out of phase pink noise is identical to in-phase; no change heard
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