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omegote | 5 years ago

I was (and still am) in the same situation as the author two years ago. I bought a pair of JBL LSR 305 that I placed at each side of the screen, roughly 120cm away from each other and at arms length from me. They're about 30cm away from the back wall.

The problem I have is with the bass. Standing in the normal position to interact with my PC, the bass strength is low. Now, the moment I move back about 1 meter, the bass strength becomes great (the one I'd expect from this pair of speakers).

I really don't know what to do :/

discuss

order

dsr_|5 years ago

Take a look at the back of your LSR305. There's a switch marked LF Trim. (There's also a HF Trim.) It has three positions: cut, normal, and boost. It's a built in EQ designed for handling room boundaries.

You'll need to set it on both speakers.

52-6F-62|5 years ago

This, plus you could place isolation pads underneath the speakers to prevent the low frequencies from causing resonance in the desk or other platform they're on if they aren't already. You can find some pretty cheap options these days that should do the trick.

grandinj|5 years ago

You're probably in a room null when in your "normal position to interact with the PC". Try moving them closer to the back wall. Or there are room treatments like adding some kind of absorption panel to the problematic wall(s).

ssssss777|5 years ago

If it's a room mode, you might experiment with where your desk is in the room and by extension where your ears end up being within that space. Or add a subwoofer whose placement you can optimize independently from your speakers.

Taken to the extreme is the "Geddes Approach" which use multiple subwoofers placed around the room and lots of EQ provide a smooth low frequency response at the listening position.

bombcar|5 years ago

Try moving one speaker back and forth - they may be angled such that the different phases are canceling bass right where you sit.

scns|5 years ago

You can't trick physics. There are notes so low (huge wavelength), you can only hear them, if you are several meters away.

colanderman|5 years ago

Waves don't work like that. Otherwise it would be impossible to hear bass through (good) headphones.

The issue is that, because of reflections, waves whose wavelengths are on the same order of magnitude as the distance from the speakers to the wall are getting cancelled out, depending on where you listen from. It is a well-known phenomenon.

(Higher frequencies which are multiples of the missing bass frequencies will also be attenuated, but this is less immediately noticeable.)

jpitz|5 years ago

What would be an example of such a note?

Low E has a wavelength of a couple meters, no problems hearing that close up.