isn't it wierd to have a subwoofer with its front (speaker) facing the wall and its back(wiring panal) facing me ???
Bingo.Originally posted by: Dundain
Well...there is no one right place to place a subwoofer. The best place is the one you find after playing some test tones and moving it all around the room for the best sound and best levels. Generally placing it in a corner will give you the strongest bass but sometimes it'll amplify it too much and give wierd peaks that shouldn't be there. Generally for home theater they recommend placing it a foot or two from a wall...that seems to give the best response. But of course it varies for everything.
As to what to place against the wall...well the "hole" is the speaker port. You don't want to place that up against the wall because thats where most of the air is pushed from so you don't wanna mess with that.
Originally posted by: Shagga
They used to say place it on the floor behind your curtains.
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Who, Bose? They only 'say' that in their promotional pictures. My curtains would play "someone-left-the-window-open-and-an-F4-tornado-blew-through" if I put my subwoofer behind them. Heck, it wouldn't even fit anyway. But one of those cute little Bose jobbies would.
Actually, draperies will have very little effect on sound below 100hz. Their absorbent properties are best in the upper frequencies.The idea behind the curtain thing was that so the sound was absorbed by the fabric which is good acoustic logic
I agree, the curtain example made because most ppl have curtains as opposed to Panels all over their rooms.A better solution would be to put acoustic panels that reflect sound in a diffused, random, yet more uniform manner.
Hmmn, where I am, and I suspect all over most of the free world, cinemas and theaters often just put lots of padding on the walls to absorb sound rather than reflect it. Since theaters are pretty large compared to rooms in a house, echos are a real, serious problem, while it might not be that much of a problem in homes. Hence the padding makes more sense here. I've never seen any cinema put speciality acoustic panels(those weird looking panels that look like buildings jutting out of a landscape), so they usually sound pretty dead. If you talk in the cinema you'd notice that you don't hear any echoes at all, and your voice often sounds stifled, that's what I mean by dead sound.I agree, the curtain example made because most ppl have curtains as opposed to Panels all over their rooms. But, yes acoutic Panels I suspect are the best. Why do you think Cinema's do it this way.
Originally posted by: Goi
Hmmn, where I am, and I suspect all over most of the free world, cinemas and theaters often just put lots of padding on the walls to absorb sound rather than reflect it. Since theaters are pretty large compared to rooms in a house, echos are a real, serious problem, while it might not be that much of a problem in homes. Hence the padding makes more sense here. I've never seen any cinema put speciality acoustic panels(those weird looking panels that look like buildings jutting out of a landscape), so they usually sound pretty dead. If you talk in the cinema you'd notice that you don't hear any echoes at all, and your voice often sounds stifled, that's what I mean by dead sound.I agree, the curtain example made because most ppl have curtains as opposed to Panels all over their rooms. But, yes acoutic Panels I suspect are the best. Why do you think Cinema's do it this way.
Yep, what flood said. Of course, these ARE just computer speakers so my Altec Lansing sub doubles as a foot rest also.The easiest way to find the proper place for your sub is to place it where you sit while it is playing... walk around the room and find the spot where you hear what you like. that is where you should place your sub.