Комментарии •

  • @IheartIIDX619
    @IheartIIDX619 5 лет назад +1

    Bob, i just wanted to say thanks for putting this info out. Ive had success with trying your method. I can finally say i can stop moving my speakers around. The rake ankle is the cherry on top.

  • @tharinduweerasekara5360
    @tharinduweerasekara5360 8 лет назад +1

    I found your talk to be very rational. Will definitely be trying this out, thanks.

  • @markcurzons8807
    @markcurzons8807 7 лет назад +10

    Amazing.....I don't have hi end equipment but I have been very drawn to the sound of stereo. There has always been something I've been searching for but I didn't know what it was. I watched this and bang! Now I have depth and width and height to my music. I now don't have speakers I have instruments and singers. The rake angle was a massive difference for me! I spent the next 3 hours listening to my music and no longer am I looking to improve my equipment. Thank you so much Bob....I'm locked in and now music sounds magical really awesome.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад +3

      Thanks for letting me know about your success with my setup process, well done!

  • @albertjennings3059
    @albertjennings3059 2 года назад

    Hi Bob! Thank You So Much for your setup knowledge and Experiences! I tried and setup my two Homemade audiophile speakers, and I could not believe what I heard! " They Sound Fantastic, Thanks to You! " You are a Genius Bob!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      Thank you, Albert! I'm glad you experienced such great results. I appreciate the genius comment as well. As Kevin Hart says - It's what I do!

  • @jamesccart
    @jamesccart 7 лет назад +1

    this is p brilliant definitely going to try this out completely agree that tiny adjustments can make a massive difference but like you said without a set up plan it's just guess work

  • @iliketohideincloset
    @iliketohideincloset 3 года назад +1

    Hi Bob, excellent work and superb knowledge. Never got my center image 100% right until you came along. Thanks a lot and all the best.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад +1

      You are very welcome. Thanks for the positive feedback!

  • @richarddunn1520
    @richarddunn1520 6 лет назад +3

    Thank-you Bob..your seminar has enabled me to "Really" hear my Polk Audio speakers with an amazing soundstage, for the 1st time in the 15 years that i have owned them!!! "YOU" have made my Vinyl listening so much more Enjoyable!!! Thank-you Sir.. Richard

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад +1

      I always love to hear from people when they finally hear their hi fis live up to their potential. Sorry it took 15 years, hope it was worth the wait.

  • @krisprojection2433
    @krisprojection2433 7 лет назад +1

    it helped me out a lot, Thanks Bob

  • @richardcarr6493
    @richardcarr6493 8 лет назад +6

    this is the most informative stuff l ve heard before, thx

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад +1

      +richard carr Thanks for the compliment - Happy Listening!

  • @thekelseychannel1962
    @thekelseychannel1962 9 лет назад +1

    Fantastic video!!

  • @stangacristian
    @stangacristian 8 лет назад +1

    thank's very much for your advice..

  • @NOVAISPERES
    @NOVAISPERES 3 года назад +3

    that is quite an amazing new info for me. i always had speakers perfectly alliened and symetrical but in my house it always feel that the voice is pull to the right and i didn't understand why! So this way to setup the speakers has been the revelation of the year! thank you so much :)
    Now, that felling when you move your head and the voice stays in the center is a tricky one and that i was not capable to do...not yet...

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад +2

      I'm glad you've experienced positive results. Center image stability is quite difficult to achieve, sometimes seems like it will never happen, but it can.

  • @RealHIFIHelp
    @RealHIFIHelp 3 года назад +3

    We need more of these videos!

  • @2madamimadam290
    @2madamimadam290 6 лет назад +5

    This was very worthwhile. I followed the procedure from the wall, one at a time. My speakers probably ended up within about 6-8" of where they were prior but the soundstage is better. The sweet spot is wider and it is overall more enjoyable. An inch or a couple degrees matters.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      Yep. the truth is in the details. Enjoy your music!

  • @selvan2379
    @selvan2379 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you sir! This is simply the best upgrade to my system. Brought the speakers closer together as you suggested for the slightly warmer sound i wanted and it worked wonderfully. What really did the magic was the rake and toe-in method. The vocals now sing beautifully, and my room is awash in room-filling music. When i close my eyes the speakers melt away. And yes the speaker placement is not perfectly symmetrical.

  • @vannk73
    @vannk73 8 лет назад +1

    I have GOT to try this now. Thanks for sharing!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад

      +ocularis73 Take your time, listen with your heart, feel free to contact me via email or phone with comments or questions - best of luck! bob@myspeakersetup.com or (720)404-7200 - Mountain time

    • @vannk73
      @vannk73 8 лет назад

      Bob Robbins
      Thank you, sir. I will have a lot of questions when I finally get around to trying it. Your presentation was inspiring to say the least.

  • @dixielandfarm
    @dixielandfarm 8 лет назад +1

    Great video. Can't wait to do this once the Christmas decorations are down.

  • @florentcharabouska7388
    @florentcharabouska7388 4 года назад +8

    Hello
    I just spent few hours applying this method and I must say it's amazing!!! I never listened my system so good before. Speakers disappeared and music is playing in an area around and behind the speakers.
    I was not able yet to change toe In because previous operation took me to much concentration. Was not able to go further. But in few days I will come back. In-between I will ENJOY my records like never.
    REALLY THANKs 🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад +2

      Congratulations, I'm glad you've experienced such great results.

  • @46wireboy
    @46wireboy 4 года назад +2

    A big heartfelt thanks, Bob. I've just done a few quick tweaks here and there(tilted and moved back and forth a bit) and I'd say there is an improvement. I need to reconfigure a bit to lower my mains bass response and cut out the subs, then I will do the whole shebang.
    I've pretty much always used the long wall; I've always liked the sound better despite the supposed proper short wall placement. Glad to see I had something going on there. My speakers were already tilted against the manufacture's proposed placement, too. They're tilted a lot more now, tho, hehe. I just didn't go far enough! May need to go even farther...
    It's sad some people can't even give it a chance. I've been thinking about a new DAC and going with Dirac, but this promises to be what I was looking for without the added budget hit. I'm all over this.
    Once again, a big thanks

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад

      Thanks for the positive feedback, I'm glad you've experienced good results.

  • @samuelsalins8309
    @samuelsalins8309 Год назад +1

    Great experimenting in sound 🎶

  • @rcshaw60
    @rcshaw60 5 лет назад +4

    I've had fantastic results with this. I was a skeptic when I first watched this a year ago, but Ballad of the Runaway Horse has been my go to with each new component upgrade, speaker upgrade, new DAC, etc. I've probably gone through this process 10 times, and used it to re-calibrate after small changes many more times. It never fails to impress me. It can be frustrating chasing the right placement (and there definitely isn't just one), but once you lock it in it is stunning.
    I'm writing because I just refined the placement of my new full-range speakers after a few weeks of break in. I did this in a few nightly rounds, getting closer and closer to that smooth, sibilance-free, right-sized voice. And they sounded better and better each time. Tonight I got it right. I could tell I was close, but when it finally locked in, it was very evident. I went from critical listening mode to a dizzy feeling like I was falling into Jennifer's voice, like she was finally right there singing her heart out. It became very real, in other words. Not in terms of it sounding "clearer" or "more transparent". It's like Bob says... real and natural.
    It takes a bit of obsession to find the right placement, and you have to listen very critically. But it truly does cascade into making everything else - techno or bluegrass, soft or booming - sound better and more natural.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад +1

      Thank you so much for your statement, it's always so cool to hear from someone who has had success with this process. It is true it takes time and almost an obsessive frame of mind to get it right - but boy, is it worth it! Well done. Loved your comment on "falling into Jennifer's voice".

    • @fullranger3435
      @fullranger3435 4 года назад +1

      @@bobrobbins5652 Does the "Locking in" persist with other tracks and recordings too, or is it limited to some tracks or kind of music only? I've had the experience (not with your method) to have great sound for jazz but not so great for symphonic music. And after some rather extensive room treatment, everything sounds right, but with a lot of energy wasted. So , does your method guarantee consistent results throughout most of the recordings (save, perhaps some really bad ones)?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад +2

      @@fullranger3435 Once the speakers are "locked-in", using both the song Sumiko recommended and the song I like to use, the speakers are "ready" for any type of music. Your system will reveal the bad stuff of inferior recordings and will allow for great recordings to be enjoyed to their full capabilities.

    • @fullranger3435
      @fullranger3435 4 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 Thank you for the quick response, I appreciate it. I'll make a try when I have some spare time.

  • @darthmaul33
    @darthmaul33 9 лет назад +2

    Thank you! Great seminar

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад +1

      +Francis Gross Glad you liked it - HiFi Rules!

    • @darthmaul33
      @darthmaul33 3 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 I just had to come back to this video (and I can't believe it's been six years!) and it has been my overall go to source for speaker placement. It is the most realistic, as I can't get the sound I prefer according to the advice of the manufacturer.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад +1

      @@darthmaul33 Thanks for letting me know your appreciation. It's a cool process with fabulous, fun results.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад +1

      @@darthmaul33 It is interesting that this process more often than not dramatically outperforms the manufacturer's instructions in their owner's manual. Gratifying, though.

    • @darthmaul33
      @darthmaul33 3 года назад

      Absolutely! Thank you

  • @jonathanharrington7950
    @jonathanharrington7950 5 лет назад +2

    I've been a speaker nut from the age of 8, collecting anything that had a dust cap, a + and - whether housed in cabinets or just loose.
    My favourite record around that time was Cliff Richard's "Wired For Sound" Small Speakers, Tall speakers, Wall speakers etc. Loved it.
    By the time I was 15 I owned my own PA system, an H&H configuration that was taller than I was once set up. I think my speaker fetish
    came from a strong desire and passion to be heard coming through them. I've been a professional drummer for most of my life being
    heard through huge Theatre Line Array Systems, All my life its been Drums, Music & Speakers.
    I'm 53 now and I kid you not, I can't move for speakers & hifi, Missions, Teac, Elac, Bang & Olfsen, Paradigm, Tannoy, Denon, Pioneer,
    JVC, Technics, Keff, Cerwin Vega, BMB, JBL, Sansui, Polk, Kenwood, Omni Audio, M-Audio, Event, Community, RCF, Peavey, Eltax, JPW,
    Fane, Wellington, Acoustic Solutions, Kenwood, LS Subs & Line Arrays, Celestion, Roland Stage Drum Monitors, the list goes on & on.
    Then there's all my hifi seperates for home use which would take a couple of hours to name them, then there's all my stage amps,
    QSC, Yamaha etc. Then there's my Drums, 2xYamaha 9000 Series Acoustic Kits and 2xRoland TD20s, I got it bad don't you think?
    There is a pair of speakers or should I say fruit machines that I would die for, the Alexander XLFs made by Wilson.
    I am very familiar with the sweet spot bliss, the best way I can describe it is to say, you'll know when you've got it just right because
    your sweet spot listening chair will now give you the satisfaction of listening to your favourite music like you've never heard it before,
    You will hear things that were never there before, only they were always there, just never in your zone. From now on everything you
    listen to will sound like the work of a world class recording engineer that has remastered, remixed thus bringing a new polished
    clarity to your virgin like ears, a clarity that sits at the top of its game throughout the entire music spectrum.
    That world class sound engineer was YOU.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад +4

      First and foremost, my apologies for taking so long to reply - I haven't checked my comments on this video for a few days. I am flabbergasted and humbled by your narrative and compliments to me. I have received thanks before but never at this level. I am so pleased that you have experienced the type of results from my process that you have described. For someone so tuned in to music and how it should make them feel, to experience what you have described is gratifying, to say the least. Many thanks to you and best wishes for endless hours of listening pleasure.
      Bob Robbins - My Speaker Setup

  • @gehtnurdurch
    @gehtnurdurch 5 лет назад +3

    WOW. I just followed our tips, and this realy transformed my system. I thought I had it but now I know it was not the limit. I was always a little frustrated that the singer moved with me with the slightest movement. Now its like i can see a crisp and clear Image almost if I could see th instruments. Also I got uncomfortable after 1 hour or so. Now I am listening for 3 Hours (eyes closed) and dont know whre the time went. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад +2

      You are very welcome - It's quite an amazing technique. I got to meet one of the co - inventors of it back in April here in Denver, I let him know he literally changed my audio life. Keep on rockin'!

    • @duroxkilo
      @duroxkilo 4 года назад +1

      the singer is supposed to move with you because you're modifying the distance between you and each speaker as you move around.. unless you position both L/R speakers close to each-other, how do you imagine that the sound coming from the distant speaker is going to be just as loud as the closer one -and also arrive at the same time?!?
      with 2 distinct L/R speakers spaced horizontally apart, it's physically IMPOSSIBLE to maintain a central point illusion when changing the listening position. it's the physics' laws :}
      in order to maintain that feat, as the distance between the listener and each speaker changes, the sound output of each speaker needs to be modified in accordance with the new position: the farther away sound source needs to be louder in relation to the closer speaker (which needs a delay synchronization); it's a well understood relation between the sound intensity and speed over a distance...
      come on people, we should be past all this BS! :}
      *speaker position is influential, but not what mr Bob is f talking about... read some papers or books for better understanding how sound propagates thru air, what reflections mean/do and how humans use hearing for locating the sound sources on the horizontal and vertical planes.

  • @stephenhargreaves381
    @stephenhargreaves381 5 лет назад +3

    Wow ! Amazing advice

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад +1

      Thanks, Stephen - I appreciate the feedback'

    • @stephenhargreaves381
      @stephenhargreaves381 5 лет назад

      You are very welcome indeed Bob , it all makes perfect sense . I'm putting together a listening room to house and listen to my collection of vintage HiFi which ive collected over some time now , what a fantastic hobby this is , its given me a lot of pleasure over the years ! Your approach enables the speakers to be fine tuned , something that has not been touched upon with great detail before, just like fine tuning a musical instrument . Thank you for sharing your great knowledge on this subject . Stephen

  • @russellparker4568
    @russellparker4568 7 месяцев назад

    Ive just finished doing this setup and HOLY SH!T! You wasn’t kidding, ive got a crazy holographic soundstage thats huge, it feels like i could reach out and touch things. imaging is so precise and clean, bass is just right. Ive had my speakers set up pretty good over the years but this is worlds away from what im used to, that soundstage just made me laugh out loud with joy. My speakers are different distances from the front wall by roughly 3” with mild toe in at different angles to each other. Thankyou!!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 месяцев назад +2

      That is fabulous news! Thanks for your post. I love hearing from people when they make the magic happen! Happy Listening and my hopes for more joyous laughter. And, you're welcome - tips are graciously accepted. 😁

  • @sydbarrett614
    @sydbarrett614 7 лет назад +3

    The one encouraging thing I got out of this is speaker placement on the long wall. For me in my room it is the only way I can set them up

  • @Projacked1
    @Projacked1 6 лет назад +2

    Best lecture so far for me, what a trip ....

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      Thank you - seems there are a lot of conflicting reactions to my lecture. I appreciate your positive feedback.

    • @Projacked1
      @Projacked1 3 года назад +1

      @@bobrobbins5652 speaker placement is THE most important part to me now.....
      You were right on the money on every part of the setup. It also taught me that changing gear or even cables you have to re-adjust the setup!. Truly fascinating! And if people don't want to listen, hey...-> their loss. You can't change stubborn or plain ignorance. You can try but it will cost energy and lots of it. People are strange , they depend on other people's words without even trying in real life. And even worse , they start arguing about technicalities without the experience ....so weirrrrrd
      Thanks so much, and kudos from Holland :)

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад

      @@Projacked1 I agree that people are strange, and serious audiophiles are even stranger. Thank you for your positivity about what I do and the service I provide, it warms my heart. Mucho appreciato! As always - Happy Listening!

    • @Projacked1
      @Projacked1 3 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 Also very accurate when it comes to movies! I recommend placement changes with the eyes closed! I changed my speakers to Tannoy's (dual concentrics), total different ball-game for placement, now those are so accurate , it took me a while to figure out that last step. But man, the size of the sound is amazing

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад +1

      @@Projacked1 Movie sound can be quite startling and impressive - even out of just 2 speakers. George Lucas said he'd rather watch a movie on a 32-inch screen with great sound rather than on a 10-foot screen with mediocre sound. Sound engineers in the movie industry put in huge amounts of time and effort to get the sound right. Thanks for your recent story - I always enjoy hearing from you.

  • @patrickmccarthy8010
    @patrickmccarthy8010 4 года назад +5

    I have seen other techniques in the past but his process caught my attention. Like most people, my environment wasn't built for the sole purpose of listening to music. The room isn't perfect, the dimensions are not ideal and I have a younger son so we have toys and furniture in places I would prefer not be. My system consists of Martin Logan 13A speakers, McIntosh mono blocks sourced by an Aurrender A10 music server all held together with Nordost Tyr 2 and Frey 2 cables. Listening to music is an addiction and one I happily feed so I invited Bob down to see if he can live up to the video. I will not go through everything he did as it is proprietary but the end result is fantastic. The simplest way to describe it is the sound seems more alive. My wife even is surprised on how much better it sounds. If you have been addicted to this hobby for more than 10 minutes you know that if your wife is happy with it, you did something right!
    Thank you Bob!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад +1

      Thank you, Patrick. I know I've done good work when the wife notices and comments on the quality of sound. You have a fabulous hi fi and a terrific family. Loved working with you.

  • @norbertlaszlo284
    @norbertlaszlo284 5 лет назад +3

    Thank you Bob for this very informative video! Your method made my cheap (I mean really cheap - under $350 the whole) system achieve a much higher level. I thought only high quality audio sytems can introduce realistic stereo imaging, but now I know it is not true. You opened up a whole new world to me. I wish you all the best and please ignore those people who are not willing to take time to try your method, instead just BSing in the comments. They know nothing. Greetings from Hungary!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад

      Thank you so much Norbert, I truly appreciate the positive feedback. I'm glad I helped you get the most out of your system.

  • @MrMarkmusic1
    @MrMarkmusic1 7 лет назад +1

    Hi Bob,this works both of my systems now sound fantastic,Elvis Presley is in the room with me,everything now sounds more live,cost to me, Time and a £9.00 Laser level, I'm very happy,i,m spreading the word to my mates, thankyou Bob.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад

      Thanks for the message - I'm glad you got your systems singing!

  • @Coilaman
    @Coilaman 9 лет назад

    Bob is right. Speaker placement is everything. It took me 7 years to find the right placement for my PSB speakers. They used to sound like mud and bricks, but now I can actually envision performers on the stage and get their proper height and width, along with natural sounding vocals and properly positioned instruments.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад

      +MuristekTV 7 years - Ouch! I'm pleased you've got your system locked in.

    • @Coilaman
      @Coilaman 8 лет назад

      +Bob Robbins Hi Bob, thanks for replying. It took me 7 years because I was never fussy with speaker placement. I just let them sit in a less than optimal position. It just didn't matter to me that much, but I finally got really tired of the subpar performance of my really great speakers.
      I bought my PSB speakers because everybody was raving about their sound. It turns out I never knew what they could do until I put some effort into their placement. I really think it takes some intelligence and maturity to realize that you can truly get much better performance out of your investment.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад

      +MuristekTV Not to mention patience and an educated ear - PSBs are terrific - Enjoy!

  • @stevedavid6207
    @stevedavid6207 7 месяцев назад +1

    I've been studying speaker placement for almost 2 years on utube with some success, but something you said about "speakers don't have to be lined up evenly" started me experimenting and I ended up with the most shockingly beautiful holographic immiging and sound stage I've ever heard.....I became part of live music, a bubble of airy three dimensional sound. The curious part is it only works with one of my needles, and I run 3 cartridges depending on the records I'm spinning......you can believe I've permanently taped the floors with the new speaker locations. P.s. the speaker locations are rather bizarre 😂.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 месяцев назад

      It's very strange that the imaging "magic" only happens with one of your cartridges. But I am glad you got the results you described. Hopefully, the bizzare look of your speakers is not too visually distracting.

    • @stevedavid6207
      @stevedavid6207 7 месяцев назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 .......yes, I thought so too. I suspect I'll have to set the speakers up specifically for the Benz cartridge...it's known for high detail and liquid vocals, but everything fell apart when I switched it in. the cartridge I set the system up with is a vintage Dennon 300 re-tipped with an elliptical.....it's wonderful. One thing I might mention is my favorite listening spot is in a corner of the room as I like a little xtra base and my system is running on bright tubes as I also prefer. The Glorious holographic sound and wonderful imaging is well worth the discordant speaker placement any day of the week 👌.

  • @alexlyf888
    @alexlyf888 8 лет назад +4

    Hi Bob, thank you for the video. I find it really inspiring!
    I do have a question if you don't mind. I am having difficulty looking for position that the bass note would stand out (or resonance with the room?) My speakers are a pair of ATC SCM11, so it's not a full range floor stander. Does that means it's more difficult to use your method? or do I just have to turn the volume louder?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад +1

      Sorry to take so long to reply to you - I guess I need to check this comment section more often. With smaller speakers, you will have to turn it up louder than you usually listen to hear when the bass kicks in and really works with the room. Just be sure not to damage your speakers or electronics!

  • @Freedom89984
    @Freedom89984 Месяц назад

    I think Bob is perfectly right with his story, but it’s also about how important the setup is for a certain listener. I’ve got a nice €20.000 hifi setup and a weird room with different listening positions. The sound is ok, no sweet spots or something, but when I go to a live band the music comes from a PA system that isn’t properly setup, most speakers are at the sides of the podium, sometimes hanging at the ceiling etc. Same thing at a theater, concert hall, it isn’t perfect most of the time. But I guess when you have a special listening room with a listening position you can get it perfect like head phones for example, if you take the time to get the right angles of your speakers.

  • @Britishbandogge
    @Britishbandogge Месяц назад

    Respect to Bob. He's still replying to comments on this 9 years after the fact. Im going to try this in a few different rooms, with varying equipment. If the results are there, I'll refer clients and installers to the website to make that $50 purchase. Should be an interesting few weeks...

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 Месяц назад +1

      Thank you so very much. I have never had anyone offer to help me in such a manner.

    • @Britishbandogge
      @Britishbandogge Месяц назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 If it works. It's a good thing for everyone involved in this weird industry we find ourselves in....
      But don't thank me yet. Once I've thoroughly tested your approach, I may be your worst enemy. Lol.

    • @Britishbandogge
      @Britishbandogge Месяц назад

      ​@@bobrobbins5652If it works. It's a good thing for everyone involved in this weird industry we find ourselves in....
      But don't thank me yet. Once I've thoroughly tested your approach, I may be your worst enemy. Lol.

    • @Britishbandogge
      @Britishbandogge Месяц назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 If it works. It's a good thing for everyone involved in this weird industry we find ourselves in....
      But don't thank me yet. Once I've thoroughly tested your approach, I may be your worst enemy. Lol.

  • @sebulbathx
    @sebulbathx 3 месяца назад

    Great seminar!
    I think listen with your ears and let them determine is the way in the end. But the measuring and all that is really hard to just let go and disregard. I mean the technical aspect is in part some of the fun too. So I think mixing the ears with technical OCD stuff is the middle ground. Tbh I probably couldn't live with having the speakers standing asymmetrical even if I thought and knew it sounded the absolute best. But I could live with the speakers standing symmetrical and still have 95% of the asymmetrical sound quality.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 месяца назад

      I agree completely - Many audiophiles have OCD tendencies, and they are difficult to let go of completely. The asymmetrical look is usually very subtle - it isn't blatantly weird looking at all.

  • @akischrisovelides5365
    @akischrisovelides5365 Год назад +3

    I own Wilson Audio Yvette speakers, which I am immensely happy with. They are my first WA speakers and were setup following the WASP process.
    I came across the Sumiko speaker positioning method, via this video, and was intrigued. As I am UK based so my only (realistic) option was to purchase Bob's setup guide and to ask him any questions via email. The 50 bucks does not just buy you a pdf (for a method that is freely available on the internet), it gives you access to Bob, which for me was invaluable in trying to implement the method remotely.
    If I was US based I would not hesitate in getting Bob over to my home, for him to implement and for me to learn from.
    So, does it work? Absolutely. Will it intuitively make sense to you? Mostly but in places you have to forget some old prejudices e.g. absolute symmetry between left and right speakers.
    You have to allocate adequate time (a lot of time) and carry out each step methodically - with enough attention to detail. For me, it took several days, with breaks in between to rest my ears and my mind.
    I used masking tape to mark my started position speaker placement, just in case I wanted to revert back.
    My first pass was rushed, as I was eager to check whether the process works and was worth perusing. It was. BUT only when I slowed down and implement fully did I get to an OMG moment. I was amazed with the difference. So much so, I wanted to write this review.
    The gate speaker needs much smaller adjustments, which take time. Although there are multiple bass-node positions for the anchor speaker, there is only one position (for each bass node) with the gate speaker. AND it is easy to miss it through rushing.
    I’m not going to go into the detail of what I asked Bob during the process as this might play to people not wanting to bother with paying Bob his 50 bucks; instead getting what they need from his RUclips video and reading reviews.
    I am gobsmacked by the difference this method makes. Based on my experience, I would have no hesitation in recommending people see for themselves what difference this makes to their current system, before and above anything else (by way of upgrades).
    Buy the guide and communicate with Bob on any specifics you have. Better still, pay him to come to your place and setup your speakers for you.
    Method definitely works.
    You need a lot of time!

  • @duarteteixeiradebarros3555
    @duarteteixeiradebarros3555 8 лет назад

    Hello Bob, very interesting presentation. I was wondering if you could give me a quick tip: I face some challenging issues due to reflections: my right wall is a big glass window 10 feet from the speaker; my left wall is 16 feet from the speaker. I'm aware that the window is a big issue and that the different distances between the speakers and wall dont help. My question is: when face with a big glass window as mine, should you increase the toe-in of that speaker to attenuate first reflections? if so, I assume you should not toe-in the other speaker? Thank you advance!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад +3

      I am so sorry for not replying to you - I don't check in on this comment section as often as I should. With your room, the speaker neat to the window should be not as far into the room as the other speaker, because it reflects so much and the sound arrives at your ears sooner than the other speaker. Toe - in of that speaker (near the window) is hard to predict, you'll just have to experiment with it to get the center image locked in and sized properly.

  • @djdacdb
    @djdacdb 6 лет назад +1

    All this comes down to Room Acoustics, that's what matters! All his steps in speaker position is to avoid sound bouncing on close walls/floor, if you treat your room with the right dampening and diffusers you will get the same but better effect, and a sweet spot should be very small and that is just how it should be.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      Room treatments are very beneficial but they will not, by themselves, get rid of the dynamic anomalies and phase distortions that are the result of non optimized speaker placement. Doing both The "ARSP" process and room treatments is definitely the best way to go.

    • @djdacdb
      @djdacdb 6 лет назад

      Bob Robbins I have an baffel wall and a full sound treated room and it is like you discribe the soundstages, I guess there several ways to deal with room interference and in general most hi-fi people like you said don't have optimal placement.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      The benefits are far more than just the imaging and sound stage, even though that's what I focused on in my presentation. The naturalness of the sound, the music just sounding "right" is also a huge benefit.

  • @TheIoMeroMero
    @TheIoMeroMero 6 месяцев назад

    All right... After a few days of trails and errors I actually got the center locked in. The sensation of the floating head did happened and it has to do with the right size of the mouth, the vocals. In my case was a matter of moving the left speaker a few inches into the room, horizontally

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 месяцев назад +1

      Terrific! Glad you got things locked in. It's fun, isn't it?

    • @TheIoMeroMero
      @TheIoMeroMero 6 месяцев назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 It sure is now, Bob! Thanks so much for your guidance

  • @joffieberkowitz9845
    @joffieberkowitz9845 3 года назад

    Hi,
    I am writing from Johannesburg South Africa.
    I have tried to set up my speakers with the Master Set system and so far have spent about 45 minutes trying to do so. I am using B&W 685 S2 speakers and a Rotel RA05ED amplifier [40 W]. My listening area is a room, 6m wide by 4.5 m deep joined to a dining room, 6m wide by 3.5m deep separated only in part by a 2.5m wall behind the listening position. I am finding it a little bit complicated and have a few questions I hope you are willing to answer:
    1. Is my room too big for the system to work? In other words, will my speakers and amplifier have enough power and a movement to do the job?
    2. Is there a way to objectively hear somehow what I am listening for in the base? For example if I listened to the song on Apple AirPods on Apple Music with the EQ set on a particular setting, for example Bass Booster, would that give me an idea of the correct song?
    4. Does it help to turn the treble knob on the amplifier down while listening for the base or will that mess things up?
    5. My room has a glass sliding door to one side and an ordinary door on the other. Should they be closed, open or is it immaterial?
    6. Finally, I have a glass table that must stay in the room. Should it be left uncovered while doing the set up?
    Thank you so much?
    This is a link to a sketch of my room: mega.nz/file/IGp2gRLK#1BtFuzixmS9n2HDe73HpLGE_Z2wck2SmP1y_zaHYVeo

  • @pauls2099
    @pauls2099 2 года назад

    This is about the best video on speaker setup ive ever seen. Just have one question as you said toe in doesnt need to be the same for both speakers but does that also apply to time and phase aligned speakers?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад +1

      Yes, very much so. The dispersion patterns of the speakers plus how they "play the room" usually causes the speakers to be toed-in differently from each other.

  • @joffieb4469
    @joffieb4469 3 года назад

    Hi. Thanks for the advice. Do you use Ballad to set up and Tootie to check or Tootie to set up? Thanks. Any other to use? Thanks

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      Hi Joffie - Sorry to take so long to reply. I actually use Ballad to set bass and center image placement, then Tootie for image height and musician placement, and when things go really well, sound beyond the speakers' boundaries.

  • @evan3054
    @evan3054 4 года назад +15

    Jump to 18:09 to see when the video starts.

    • @vladimirdragojlovic3616
      @vladimirdragojlovic3616 3 года назад +1

      Yes, twenty mins of BS

    • @ianhayes7684
      @ianhayes7684 2 года назад

      I was so glad he actually got to it. "Do you want 45 more mins of an ad? Or do you want to learn?"LOL. We want knowledge please. Great info though!

  • @zkete
    @zkete 7 лет назад

    Hi Bob, I really enjoyed this very informative talk, it really opened up my eyes (or rather my ears) to try a different approach with speaker placement. I do have a question regarding my own setup: how would you apply these rules to a three-way sound system? I'm thinking of expanding my sound system to two bass cabinets, two mid/hi-range speakers and one bullet tweeter array for the very high frequencies on the ceiling firing in 4 directions (towards the north, east, south and west walls). The room I'm thinking of putting it in is a rectangular room of 4 x 3 meters, or 13.12 x 9.84 feet in length and width. I'm aiming for a warm but clear sound, with strong bass response so bass-heavy electronic music won't sound 'weak'.
    Sorry if this is a complicated question to answer, I'm just wondering what sort of things i need to pay attention to with such a three-way system.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад

      I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but my setup technique only works with conventional speakers - either cabinet or planar. They can't be disconnected to each other or in separate pieces. The only exception would be a speaker like the Gershman Black Swan. Any speakers that are wall mounted don't work with this process. I guess you could try to do the setup with the bass cabinets first, then blend in the mid/hi range units later, but the omni-directional super tweeters in my opinion should not be utilized at all. My setup is about image specificity and accuracy, not sending sound all over the room, only creating the illusion that the sound is very spacious and spread out.

    • @zkete
      @zkete 7 лет назад

      Ah i see, that makes total sense. Maybe I'll just mess about with my dad's old Magnepan speakers before i expand my system even more, maybe they'll give me some nice results. Although i've heard they might sound a little too 'flat' for bass-heavy music.
      Thanks anyway for your reply. I keep coming back to this video because the talk is just too enjoyable to not watch. You're a really good speaker (no pun intended).

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад +1

      Glad you like the video, that was a very enjoyable day for me. I appreciate the compliment.

  • @ryanclements6031
    @ryanclements6031 3 года назад +1

    Are there placements that you avoid? After doing this the first time I ended up with the anchor speaker equidistant from the side and rear wall (1m (3'3") measured from the tweeter). This is traditionally a no no. Thanks for continuing to answer questions 5 years later!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад +1

      I haven't yet found any placements to avoid, although I try not to schedule sets in rooms that are too small or cluttered. One thing I do suggest over and over is to avoid the temptation to measure distances. If the speaker ends up where it sounds wonderful, it doesn't matter what the measurements are. What matters is how the speakers "play" the room, and how they work together to make music.

    • @ryanclements6031
      @ryanclements6031 3 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 Great. In an L shaped room would you normally expect the speaker facing the open part of the room (where the wall behind the seating position is further back) to be closer to the rear wall?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад

      @@ryanclements6031 Actually, the exact opposite would be the norm. With less of an early reflection, the speaker on that side would need to be closer to you.

  • @brunorivademar5356
    @brunorivademar5356 4 года назад

    I'm ready to give it a go!. Have you had successful setups with speakers more than 3 feet from the front wall? One of my apartment columns is right behind the anchor speaker and I can't place it any closer than 3 feet. I do have them setup against the long wall and they are perfectly centered though. I really want this to work!!!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад +1

      Definitely yes! The further into the room the speakers are, the better the illusion of depth of image will be. Good Luck!

  • @rickewilde
    @rickewilde 3 года назад

    Would i have to reset my speakers for different music genres and or recordings or once I've set it up i can expect to experience optimum sound quality everytime i play music regardless.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад

      Once the speakers are set, all genres of music benefit.

  • @audiotomb
    @audiotomb 4 года назад

    do you start with a set listening seat location? equilateral triangle - adjust the seat to that?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад

      Wherever you have your "preferred" listening position - have the speakers opposite that and spaced a logical amount apart. Planar speakers are more affected by width apart than "box" speakers are for best bass response. The equilateral triangle thing is not that critical, but it is a decent starting point. My speakers at home ended up with the right speaker nearly 3 inches further away from my listening position due to room acoustics and following the setup process.

  • @emil4985
    @emil4985 2 года назад

    Only question I have, with pulling the speaker from the wall to find the most statisfying bass, is do you pull it, go back to listening position, listen, then go back to the speaker, pull it an inch again, go back to the listening position again? Or do you just pull it and listen while holding the speaker, sort of?

    • @emil4985
      @emil4985 2 года назад

      honestly - at this volume the bass sounds okay at every position, but all the high notes, especially the violins, are nearing cringeworthy territory at this volume at all positions.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      If you are doing this alone, listen not only to the bass but also to the tonal characteristic of the vocal. When the bass has articulation and the vocal is not cringeworthy, that's the best location. You can either do the listening as you pull the speaker, or go back and forth from your listening position.

  • @Gnofg
    @Gnofg 3 года назад

    I bought speakers from Listen up in Denver. I still have them.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад

      They carry great products - what speakers do you have?

  • @osezchanger1596
    @osezchanger1596 3 месяца назад

    I've just bought your guide. Usefull information.
    I have an openbaffle with full range driver on each and for the moment. Lii audio F-12. Sound excellent. But my bass need boost. Before the configuration do I need to equalize with dsp for best result, or just keep the speaker as it, no equalize .
    For my right speaker. I have a door behind. Does I need to keep it close or open for the setup ?.
    My room is almost 13 feet by 10 feet. I use the long side for wide possibility and less side wall reflection. Does it will be a better option to go with the short wall ?
    This is a small room used for my music, TV and PC and I think if my speaker is too close from listening position then this will be deceiving. I hope I can do excellent result. I'm going to try this tomorrow.
    Can I wait to place my acoustic panel (absorber) before the setup is done, or the acoustic panel must be there before setup ?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 месяца назад +1

      I usually recommend waiting until after the set is done before doing DSP.
      Close the door behind the right speaker
      10 X 13 is quite small - Your main focus should be proper tonality and image specificity. Large, expansive sound will be VERY limited just because of room dimensions, Either wall can be used - whichever works for the logistics and use of the room.
      Put the panel in place first - you should do the set so the room is how it will be when listening.

  • @russellparker4568
    @russellparker4568 7 месяцев назад

    I may have missed this part but in the first step when adjusting the bass (distance from front wall) should we have both speakers playing or just the one we are moving backwards and forwards?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 месяцев назад +1

      Sorry for taking so long to reply - Both speakers playing is best, although you can face one of them away from you if you want.

  • @djwindhoek
    @djwindhoek 3 года назад

    Would this work in a small room measuring 14.1 x 10.6 x 10.3 feet (4.3 x 3.25 x 3.15m LxWxH)? Fwiw, the speakers are Tannoy Eatons and they go down to 40hz so setting them up along the long wall as recommended by the RSP method seems counterintuitive. Thanks.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад +1

      As small as your room is, you may be better off setting the speakers on the short wall. The trade-off is the effect of the sound going beyond the boundaries set by the speakers, but in such a small room, there wouldn't be that much of that anyway.

    • @djwindhoek
      @djwindhoek 3 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 Thanks, Bob, I really appreciate your taking the time to reply. I've had the Tannoys for about a month now and I'm beginning to think they're just too big for my room as the place where they work best involves having one of the speakers just in front of the living room door. Soundwise, it's great and probably as good as it gets without extensive room treatment and such like - I've pretty much tried every other position - but aesthetically and practically, it feels like a pyrrhic victory, and a pyrrhic victory, sadly, is no victory at all. The speakers have so much potential but I'm not sure my room will ever play ball, as it were. Regardless, thanks again for taking the time to reply :) Derek

  • @krisprojection2433
    @krisprojection2433 6 лет назад

    Got a question bob, my room on the right side is open with no wall would the right speaker need to come closer to listen position? Or back to the wall more?. Thanks

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад +1

      Closer, because the sound has nothing to reflect off of so it takes a little longer to get to your ears. Probably not a lot closer - pay close attention to center image location, that will determine when it's right.

    • @krisprojection2433
      @krisprojection2433 6 лет назад

      Thank you bob ill have a play around. I got the center image very good but the bass is lacking due of my open house.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад +1

      If you feel the bass is lacking, you may have to start all over to find an optimum place for the anchor speaker.

  • @mattgiunt
    @mattgiunt 2 года назад

    I realize this is a very old video but I have been trying to figure out your system for home theater. I took all the delay from my front two speakers but Im confused on the rest. Do I just take a distance measurement from my seat to center channel and use that as center delay and keep the fronts with no delay? Thanks for your help if you happen to read this.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      Measure the distance from your viewing position to the fronts. Then do the same for the center. The difference between these two measurements should be small, maybe 2-3 inches at most. Let's say it's 2. That's the delay you need to put on the center, as it is usually closer to you than the fronts.

    • @mattgiunt
      @mattgiunt 2 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 Thanks

  • @pitis2flie
    @pitis2flie 7 лет назад

    Hi Bob I have a problem that's driving me crazy. I have the center image set when sitting in the sweet spot and also when I sit to the left the center image is still solid. But when I sit to the right even just a little bit the center image shifts that way. Any tips or advice? Thanks.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад +1

      If you make a very small adjustment moving the right speaker back away from you, it should not affect the center image accuracy, but should solve the image moving to the right when you do. And I mean a very small adjustment, probably less than 1/4 inch.

    • @pitis2flie
      @pitis2flie 7 лет назад

      Bob Robbins thanks a lot sir you are the man! Happy new year.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад

      You're welcome - nice to know I'm THE MAN

  • @tigsmartpt
    @tigsmartpt 2 года назад

    For me make magic, thanks

  • @rvz77
    @rvz77 3 года назад +2

    Play it LOUD, for HOURS??
    Boy my neighbors are gonna love me!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад

      Not stupid loud, just loud enough for the bass to be full-bodied

  • @ChadAV69
    @ChadAV69 6 месяцев назад

    44:18 dude that is CRAZY. I just got done moving my speakers trying to find a good spot. One speaker is in a corner and the other speaker is like 8 feet from it’s side wall. Sure enough, the speaker that is in the corner ended up further into the room just like you said.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 месяцев назад +1

      Hopefully, you are pleased with the results. As I always say - Happy Listening!

  • @skularatna8136
    @skularatna8136 6 лет назад

    Bob this is a fantastic video and I was quite surprised how accurately I have positioned my home speakers to ge that more life like sound. I am using a Cayin A50T Tube Amp, A rega Rp3 with Denon DL-110 MC and monitor Audio Silver RX2. I have had friends come over for dinner and listen to vinyl and not want to leave. the LP I have of "Ella Sings the Gershwing Song" book sounds like I was there with her, the sound is warm and enveloping. I can listen for hours without getting listening fatigue or want to tear my hair out. Also I liked your point about how when you move the vocalist doesn't move with you and that is so true, I guess it's kind of like the Doppler effect the further you move from the sound source the fainter it becomes. So when you move from your favourite listening spot(sweet spot) the vocalist doesn't move with you and that's certainly how it is at home for me. Great Great video.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      I'm glad you've had such excellent results - I'll add your name to the list of believers - thank you for letting me know your success story.

  • @bytewizzz
    @bytewizzz 4 года назад +2

    This process is exactly the same as setting up and columnating or aligning your catadioptric telescopes two mirrors...You make or turn the "wavefront" of the light/sound coming into the aperture (your room) into a single wave front of light/sound perfectly hitting the eye(ear) at the same moment...and electrical--light and mechanical analogies/equations are the same...Remember this that Nicola Tesla was quoted as saying that "Everything is the Light" therefore everything electrical and mechanical (ALL MATTER!)

  • @brunorivademar5356
    @brunorivademar5356 6 лет назад

    So I've got my speakers set up against the long wall and I happen to have good symmetry from side to side, I've always thought it had to be the other way round, now it turns out it's the best way to place them? I'm confused!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад +1

      Yes, long wall placement is best, and if they have good symmetry that is fine.

    • @brunorivademar5356
      @brunorivademar5356 6 лет назад

      Well I guess I better get to work then! Thank you so much for replying.

  • @johnwhitehead8006
    @johnwhitehead8006 2 года назад

    I wonder if this technique applies to omni-directional speakers like Ohm or the former Mirage speakers?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      I have not yet done the set with omnis. I have done open baffle (Spatial Audio) with terrific results. And dipoles (Martin Logan) worked great also. I have yet to find speakers whose sound quality didn't dramatically improve using this technique.

  • @badrini
    @badrini 4 года назад

    It isn't clear for me if also the distances from the speakers to the centre, not only the toe in, may be different. It may cause difference in the time travelling of sound?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад

      What it allows for is so the speakers work with the room, taking into account all the existing furnishings, etc. The measurements don't matter! Put away your tape measure and listen with your heart. You'll be able to tell when it is right!

  • @marekwaczynski3894
    @marekwaczynski3894 Год назад

    Hi Everybody. Hi Bob. I have few questions as I am not a native English not all I understood. SO if possible please answer few questions. Doing first step means moving speakers forward inch by inch (or shorter) should I move amp balance fully LEFT only for left speaker or both at the same level. Than what you mean by boom at best point/position. What should I expect from bass? Just the best subjective sound or whatever interference/whatever effect, etc. Rest is more than less clear for me with rotating and leaning but first step is unclear. Thx in advance for all advice/ Marek/Poland EU.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 Год назад +1

      My apologies for taking so long to reply.
      Leave your balance control centered when doing the first step. You can make larger movements of the first speaker to begin, then smaller movements after the speaker is into the room about a half meter or so.
      Bass is difficult to describe - but what you are listening for is when the bass has the best of the 3 characteristics - linearity (a clear definition of all the notes), extension ( so the low notes are very full bodied and deep). and output (so there is plenty of bass). Plus, listen for a smooth naturalness to the vocal - you don't want any shrillness or "shoutiness" to her singing.

    • @marekwaczynski3894
      @marekwaczynski3894 Год назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 Thank you. Will try sooner or later. My room is rather small 6x4 m maybe less with one wall (long one at 40 deg (roof) so not easy I guess.

  • @iselonsdickwet
    @iselonsdickwet 9 лет назад

    live vocalist with sound reinforcement(PA) or live vocal in just a room?

    • @vdochev
      @vdochev 4 года назад

      On concerts I see the vocalist walking on the stage like crazy, but the sound comes only from the middle.

  • @Bigirondoug
    @Bigirondoug 2 года назад +1

    May be a stupid question but need clarification.
    1.When he refers to setting the anchor by starting with the left speaker, does he mean that the right speaker should be disabled and producing NO sound while listening only to the left speakers reaction to movements in the room ?
    2. Does this setup work for side firing woofers as in the Audio Physics Virgo's

    • @shonholland9111
      @shonholland9111 2 года назад +1

      1. Both speakers will be playing all the time.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад +1

      Side firing woofers should fire out, away from each other. If they are on both sides, then it doesn't matter

    • @Bigirondoug
      @Bigirondoug 2 года назад

      Thanks all for the replies.
      Was able to achieve outstanding imaging and soundstage beyond the speakers but still fighting the head in a vise problem ( moving off center results in the vocalist moving to the side I move toward ) What parameter is responsible for this ?
      I've tried everything from toe in, distance between speakers, listening position and distance from rear wall but nothing helps.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      @@Bigirondoug Center image drift is very difficult to get completely rid of. If, when you move your head to the left and the center image moves with you, it means the left speaker is VERY SLIGHTLY too close to you in relation to the right speaker. Move the left speaker away from you in very small increments until the problem is eliminated or at least minimized. This should not affect the center image lock, if it does, you've gone too far. Ditto for the right speaker. Only adjust one speaker to solve the problem, either one is fine.

    • @Bigirondoug
      @Bigirondoug 2 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 Thank you Bob for the replies I truly appreciate your input, and will try some more fine tuning tonight.

  • @Oneness100
    @Oneness100 9 месяцев назад

    Speaker placement is important, but the biggest factor of how good your system sounds is the ROOM. You have PRESSURE, REFLECTIONS and AMBIENT NOISE which are ALL producing distortions, phase problems, etc.
    You want to hear more subtle passages in your system? LOWER the noise floor. The optimal SPL for ambient noise is around 30dB or less. What's the ambient noise floor of your room? The average is more in the mid, to high 40dB or even higher. There's one way to lower that noise floor and that's by building a BARRIER between your room and the outside world.
    THEN, there are PRESSURE problems. The biggest and most audible are AXIAL room modes. Depending on the room dimensions, the amount of energy being produced, it's not uncommon to have peaks and nulls that are 6dB, 8dB, 10dB, and even as much as 20dB peaks and nulls. You can't eq your way out of those, and they are at different frequencies between 2 parallel wall surfaces, some are between the front and rear walls, some are between the side walls, and then floor to ceiling. You can't place your speakers around those peaks and nulls. You might place your speaker for one frequency, but there's always another frequency that will cause you to hear exaggerated or not at all.
    How do you fix that? The best way is to design and build a completely new room where the walls, ceiling and even the floor is designed to absorb ALL of the problems at 100hz and below. Most rooms have Axial room modes STARTING at around 30hz to 50hz depending on the dimensions of your room. But these types of rooms just a new construction can cost 6 digits.
    Then there are reflections, which is easily treated with open cell foam and treat about 70% surface coverage with a high quality open cell foam that has a good slope between 125hz and 500hz, that's the most critical.
    Then to make your room open up and sound bigger, l typically that's accomplished with front and rear wall diffusion and the best is Quadratic, and you have to figure out the best Prime Sequence to use, have at least 70% surface coverage. The problem is that you HAVE to treat the other problems first, and you have to have long enough distances between the listening position and the diffusors so the diffused sound field can develop.
    Here's a room that has all of this. the video shows the wall and ceiling construction. It has no Axial modes in the entire room. the ambient noise floor is about 28dB, and it's probably amongst the best designed and built rooms I've seen to date. The only thing I would add is more diffusion on the ceiling, but that would add a considerable $$, but that would make the room sound even bigger.
    ruclips.net/video/eMLA5h0nh8s/видео.html

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 месяцев назад

      I completely agree that the room is a HUGE variable and contributer to how a hi-fi sounds.
      Most people, however, have their hi-fis in a multi-use room, and cannot do what you suggest. They simply aren't willing to go through the expense, labor, and time to do what you describe.
      That is what is so great about my technique - it optimizes the speakers' performance in the room AS IT IS, taking into account ALL the sonic quirks and idiosynchracies the room has.
      I realize this may be hard to accept and/or believe, but EVERY person who has hired me could verify the results I achieve through this process.
      Plus, I have lived with the benefits for over 20 years - I know it works.

    • @Oneness100
      @Oneness100 8 месяцев назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 I don't doubt that people are happy with the results, but what is their experience with other rooms that have been treated? It took me 50 years until I found one company that makes their own treatment and actually even talks about treating Axial modes. I've never heard anyone prior even discuss Axial modes, their importance and how to treat. People just typically talk about standing waves or room modes, and their answer is sticking a "bass trap' in the corner.
      But, you're right, most average people have a dual purpose room, one for listening to their stereo and to entertain guests where there are lots of chairs, tables, etc. and the layout isn't ideal. Yeah, I get it.
      It's a shame that even with the mfg's, I don't think they have the best listening rooms they could get. I see a lot of short cuts, questionable material choices/design choices.

  • @ebarbie5016
    @ebarbie5016 4 года назад +5

    It's acoustically impossible to get the center imaged fixed at the center when the listener moves from the sweet spot unless a center channel is used. Sounds like BS to me...

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад +2

      Like Patrick Swayze said in "Road House" - opinions vary

    • @nickaleo7
      @nickaleo7 4 года назад

      It is possible, even without a center speaker.

  • @davidh9
    @davidh9 Год назад

    Bob, not sure if you’re still responding to this video, but you seem to have an idea of how “the Ballad” was recorded. I’ve tried to get my speakers situated, but I can’t tell if I’m struggling with the “big voice” effect, or if I’m at the “headphones”point. In my preferred listening location and surrounding seats it sounds like I’m sitting at a front-center table at a medium-size jazz club. Clean sound, centered throughout, spacious, just up-close and personal. Seems like the result of a mic’d recording, as opposed to a live recording from a single mic in the room. Thoughts?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 Год назад +1

      Sorry for taking so long to reply. I get so few comments to this video, I've fallen out the habit of checking on a regular basis.
      Anyway, to the best of my knowledge, this is a studio recording, with very simple microphone setup, but I don't know how many mics. Jennifer is definitely dead center, and Rob Wasserman is just behind her, and a tiny bit to her right, with the upright bass leaning slightly to the right.

    • @davidh9
      @davidh9 Год назад

      ​@@bobrobbins5652, thanks for replying. I ended up swapping my speakers right & left to place the tweeter in the center since the cabinets are a non-linear design and the tweeters are now in the upper inside corner. After feeling like it was dialed in pretty well, we watched a movie and the high range of vocals fell off (or flew off) with some weird effects on the S's and other high-frequency consonants. Hoping that centering those tweeters more will allow them to be inside the zone instead of outside.

  • @jimbobbank
    @jimbobbank 3 года назад +1

    If it makes you happy you should do it. I personally think if moving the speakers so accurately can make such massive differences and reflected sound can be heard by humans so easily but strangely once you have them in place you can walk round the room and the central image stays still etc( even sounds better from the garage😱🤔🙂😂) does not make sense. It’s like applying one law of physics for the point of sound and a different one for the point of listening. If you move around the room all reflections and even the point of sound will change in relation to the listener. It’s just a little silly. I will add that I know nothing so I’m just sounding off😀 I do believe you can change the sound by speaker placement for sure but I am sceptical about this. I hope this works for you if you try it though👍

  • @stoicar
    @stoicar 9 месяцев назад

    If the room is very small 9ft with 15ft i can place the speaker on the long wall?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 месяцев назад

      Long wall placement would be possible, however compromises would have to be made as far as distance apart and distance into the room. Short wall would allow for your listening seat to be a better distance from the speakers, but getting the sound to go "beyond the boundaries" would be almost impossible to achieve.

  • @dedskin1
    @dedskin1 6 лет назад

    How should i set up my speakers for Trance music , or Techno , or where to placea Mono speaker , and by the way my girlfriend is not called Jenifer , if i call her that im in a trouble , im confused

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      It doesn't matter what type of music - the setup technique described in this video works for all. A mono speaker should be brought into the room as described for the first of 2 stereo speakers - slowly from against the wall until a good bass mode is found and where the vocal doesn't "shout" at you. Your girlfriend comment makes no sense to me. If you tire of having to keep going back to the video to follow the steps, order the Setup Guide by sending $50 US through PayPal to bob@myspeakersetup.com

    • @dedskin1
      @dedskin1 6 лет назад

      Jennifer is a joke , doesn't matter , sure speaker placement should be " one with the Room " but my experience is near field where it doesn't matter, best sound i heard is speakers glued like head phones to my head , or mono where it also doesn't matter , or head phones ,even when i set speakers up correctly, man the music is low quality , my room is a box , a bad box , rings at 100hz or around and harmonics , so there are bigger problems , Sound coming from Studios is garbage to start with , sound carrier is digital MP3 , distortion as high as 20-30% THD , most speakers are too small due to price so they sound boomy , where should i stop , endless list of problems , that is the source of my cynicism if you can understand that . On the other hand i was also educated in electrostatics , i should work in same field as you so i respect waht you do and there is off course place for that , but i never expected to do speaker placement for common folk , i expected to do that for Venues , large facility's , industry, in talks like this i would mention those problem , be more realistic . So im not saying anything you say is not correct , its fine , im just explaining where my cynicism comes from . I would be happy if i had problems like "singer stereo imaging " . in reality im happy if my singer's voice is not distorting on transients due to Studio Compression and bad digital sound carrier

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад +1

      It's too bad your room is so difficult - I've done speaker sets in rooms that were essentially cubes with surprisingly good results. I can't quite agree with you regarding the high distortion levels in recorded music - it certainly is not what I experience at home. I feel a little sorry for you - with you embracing the severe negative attitude you have towards music at home, I believe you will never hear your hi fi live up to its' potential - you know what they say - Attitude is Everything! Negative thoughts create negative results - if you believe good sound will never or can't happen in your room - you're right.

    • @dedskin1
      @dedskin1 6 лет назад

      I know its not your experience i see that but that doesnt mean its not realistic experience , and that you shouldn't listen , like i listened to you , i didnt say that you said anything wrong , I jsut add stuff and im not making it up , its what i heard , took a lot of work to open these ears im not born with it , what i talk about is what you will find in 99% of places where music is heard , including here , things like your sound here , lots of problems . What should i do , turn you off , not listen . Does this sound good on your system ? Come on , there are big problems , one im focused on is compression , dynamics and sound carrier , i was thinking of all ppl that you will get that , but looks like not

  • @JustinHEMI05
    @JustinHEMI05 2 года назад

    Will this work for home theater set ups?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад +2

      It lays down a solid foundation for theater sound. Once the 2 mains are dialed in, then the rest of the speakers can be placed, adjusted, and the time delays and volumes for all the surrounds and the center can be completed. The goal is to not be able to audibly tell where ANY of the speakers are.

    • @JustinHEMI05
      @JustinHEMI05 2 года назад +1

      @@bobrobbins5652 thank you very much.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      @@JustinHEMI05 You're welcome

  • @absoluttaudiofilt3229
    @absoluttaudiofilt3229 5 лет назад

    This might have been the way to do it back in the good ole days. Luckelly today we have affordable measuring equipment and software.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад

      Measurements don't matter - our sense of hearing isn't based on them, it's based on how our ears are pressurized. Software can't fix what goes against the laws of physics. Plus, if what you say is right - why did Wilson Audio develop and manufacture The Chronosonic Master loudspeaker, with all it's capabilities?

    • @absoluttaudiofilt3229
      @absoluttaudiofilt3229 5 лет назад

      ​@@bobrobbins5652 Sorry, but you are wrong. You don't just measure pressurization. Actually the description for the Cronosonic can give you an idea of what other data you can get from a measurement. Your method might be great for people just getting in to audio and isn't far from the methods we all used up until the the early 00s. Now however there are free software like REW and cheap calibrated mics which can give you a pretty accurate reading of your room, (which Wilson didn't design). It's great that you help people with their basic setup, but that is all it is...basic.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад

      @@absoluttaudiofilt3229 I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree - my sets of Sonus Faber Stradivari Homage and Focal Utopia Maestros were far from "basic" - as the customers I did them for will attest. Plus, I don't measure anything, my ears are the only tool I need (except for a laser level).

    • @absoluttaudiofilt3229
      @absoluttaudiofilt3229 5 лет назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 No prob. :) As long as we enjoy the prosess, result and music it doesn't matter if we disagree. Just got a set of Dynaudio Evidence Platinum last weekend and are in a happy place at the moment. Nice talking to you!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад

      @@absoluttaudiofilt3229 Those are some serious speakers - let me know if you want to hire me to set them up for you after they are broken in :)

  • @michaelstark7962
    @michaelstark7962 6 месяцев назад

    YOUR A SHAMAN TO HEAVEN ON EARTH THROUGH SOUND MUSIC STEREOS A NEW LIFE TO LIVE TO KNOW THE TRUTH WHATS REALLY GOING ON TO SUFFER LESS TO HAVE MORE HAPPINESS THANKS FOR YOU THE REAL HONEST TRUTH GOODNESS

  • @LancerFIN
    @LancerFIN 7 лет назад +3

    The part about center image staying still even if you move must be bullshit. Just because speakers are optimally placed doesn't make laws of physics go away. If you move closer to one speaker it's going to sound louder and move the image.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад +1

      I've said this before to other people who don't believe in what I do - just because you haven't heard what I describe doesn't mean it can't happen. I can be 8 feet to the right of my right speaker, and my hi fi still creates the illusion of a locked in and properly sized center image. Sorry you've never experienced this - but it is NOT BULLSHIT.

  • @jamesccart
    @jamesccart 7 лет назад +1

    so just out of interest what are your speakers you use at home ?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад +1

      I have a pair of Escalante Designs Pinyon monitors paired with a REL Stadium 3 sub. The speakers on on stands, lead-shot filled, not sure of the brand.

  • @hixyhicks
    @hixyhicks 7 лет назад

    do i need a very expensive system for this to work.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад

      No, not at all. I've done set ups with lower level Zu Audio and B&W speakers with excellent results. You just can't have wall mount or in wall speakers.

    • @hixyhicks
      @hixyhicks 7 лет назад

      Thank ww38.you.so my.proac and tp 60 would be fine.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад

      Sure - without a doubt. ProAcs are a very good product

    • @hixyhicks
      @hixyhicks 7 лет назад

      Thanks again

  • @analoguecity3454
    @analoguecity3454 4 года назад

    I don't care if its natural or not, I think a good stereo image is awesome and colorful! ALL SOUND RECORDINGS are fake anyway! All the processes that go on to reproduce sound! Might as well have it sound beautiful!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад +1

      Correct - a - Mundo! Hi-Fi should be fun, and an expansive image is exactly that!

    • @analoguecity3454
      @analoguecity3454 4 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 yez sirrrr!

  • @ryanchenoweth5673
    @ryanchenoweth5673 4 года назад +2

    I really love the idea of this, however for the life of me I have never been able to set up any of the speakers that I have owned so that the centre image stays centred no matter where I move!!

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад +3

      Center image stability is the most difficult "effect" to achieve - some speakers/room combinations will not allow it to happen. Sometimes an adjustment of less than 1mm is all that is needed, but it's impossible to predict in which direction the adjustment is necessary.

  • @dsmith1543
    @dsmith1543 6 месяцев назад

    I’m going to give this a try, but I’m having a really hard time believing in the method with the lack of explanation and attention paid to the starting seating position since it makes such a profound difference in the end result.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 месяцев назад

      Looking back on this , I did neglect mentioning the starting seating position. Most listeners, however, already have their room set up as they are going to use it for listening, and most are unwilling or unable to change the whole layout of the room. This setup technique works for the room AS IT IS, without having to make huge changes in anything, except for the location and positioning of the speakers.
      Try not to over think it, and go through the proces based on your current listening position - I think you'll be quite pleased with the results.

  • @SliderMC
    @SliderMC 8 лет назад +1

    When moving your head from center position, something very annoying happens - comb filtering, because of the two sources arriving at different time intervals. This is unbeatable, so no going around that. Can't beat physics.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад +2

      OK - then why is my center image properly locked in place and floating in space right where it belongs even if I stand and listen 10 feet to the right of my right speaker in line with my preferred listening position?

    • @SliderMC
      @SliderMC 8 лет назад

      I found that this comb-filtering at high frequencies is easily heard if we use pink noise as signal. Then by moving the head slowly left to right, the sound changes, mostly in the higher register. Great presentation by the way. You've presented a protocol, for achieving the best sound by setting up the equipment right.

    • @Mikexception
      @Mikexception 7 лет назад +1

      This "comb filtering" is done by phase noncoherences. That problem is known to me too for a many years. It is source of limited accuracy in stereo on reason is that we use two ears positioned in distance. In fact there is no even "sweet spot" for humans at all. The one blessed by audiophiles so often :). Anyone may see my www web diysound.eu to see the way which as in my tests supress that efect. Just click on "Stereo Sound Image (size and clarity) Improvement by author". You will find there also the background of operation. If You follow my suggestions there will be almost no "comb filtering" an in there will be stability of listening. Anyway it is only one of countless obstacles in reality in audio with mastering of recordings at priority .

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 7 лет назад +5

      I agree that you can't beat physics, that is what The Art of Rational Speaker Placement is based on. Call me crazy, but I don't listen to pink noise through my hi fi, I listen to music! Our sense of hearing is sensitive and accurate enough that when combined with the properly performed setup technique I use, comb filtering problems do not exist! My hi fi at home is proof - you'd have to hear it to believe it, even though you don't at this time.

    • @Mikexception
      @Mikexception 7 лет назад

      Comb efect in music is not posible to notice as "comb" - sounds are too short and changable to analize it. Without direct comparaison of two qualities nobody can judge it. It is affecting speaker set quality .judgement with noise. Imagine how it affects mircophone recordings?. So if You do not procced it then iit may not worry You. My post is about better - not good or bad. Talkig about "proper setup" upsets me. I did in past already hundreds proper setups - each different and each looked the best so it do not exist. In reality we use best setup based on our own starting criteria because in audio each small alteration needs new setup.

  • @awdadwadwad1723
    @awdadwadwad1723 4 года назад +2

    I'm trying to achieve locked center for years, never managed to do so. You move your head 10 cm to the side and singer moves like 50-100 cm, I hate it and can't enjoy music as much as I would like to. Speaker positioning is a nightmare. There is always something wrong, either balance or bass or imaging or tonality or trebles. The bigger speakers the more problems you get. Headphones are sooo much easier :(

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 4 года назад

      Center image stability is the hardest "effect" to achieve - some speaker/room combinations won't let it happen. Sometimes a 1mm adjustment is all that is needed - it's difficult and takes great patience.

    • @ChasingTone666
      @ChasingTone666 8 месяцев назад

      It’s pure physics. It’s supposed to do that. Don’t buy the snake oil.

  • @zaoria123
    @zaoria123 5 месяцев назад

    27:25 Rake angle

  • @MaybeTiberius
    @MaybeTiberius 2 года назад

    really great video but if i would suggest you something, it would be to have it reupload. The constant microphone whitenoise is kind of distracting to be honest to listen to for over an hour. Its really not too hard of a task to put a audio scource into your tool of choice, have it grab the a whitenoise sample and filter it out :P

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад

      An excellent suggestion, thanks. But I am a doofus with computers, so I have no idea how to do what you describe.

    • @MaybeTiberius
      @MaybeTiberius 2 года назад

      @@bobrobbins5652 even free tools like audacity can do that pretty easy and efficient. with this you can for example pick a few seconds where noone talks so only the background noise is audible and audacity can then take a background noise sample and filter it out for the rest of the track

  • @utubecomment21
    @utubecomment21 7 лет назад +14

    So if these so-called experts, selling such high-price tagged equipment, writing for magazines, boosting of their academic credentials, don't even know how to voice their own systems, should we be listening to them at all!!! That's not a question.

  • @bobrobbins5652
    @bobrobbins5652 2 года назад +4

    So, the time has come to make a ridiculous observation. As you can see from the number of views above, since this video originally posted in January of 2015, over 82,000 people have watched it. As of today, less than 2 dozen people have hired me to set up their speakers using this technique. Allow me to repeat that - less than 2 dozen people have hired me!
    That breaks my heart. This setup technique is the single most effective and transformative thing you can do to allow your hi-fi system to perform up to its' full potential. I see dozens of photos of peoples' systems on AGons Virtual Systems page every week that I know I could help, yet essentially no one takes advantage of my service.
    The benefits of this setup technique are not just about imaging excellence - in the end, there is simply a "rightness" about the sound, a coherency, and naturalness to the overall tonal balance of what you hear. It allows you to be immersed in your music like you never have been before.
    Instead of spending multiple thousands of dollars on wire, fuses, and hi-fi knick-knacks that improve things a little, bring me to your home and allow me to make your hi-fi truly "sing" as it never has before - once and for all.

  • @jonayamaha3215
    @jonayamaha3215 3 года назад

    i love when the woman can here the difference in sound, classic.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад

      Women have better hearing than men. And almost every one I've talked to loves music!

  • @studio-yilmaz
    @studio-yilmaz 9 лет назад +1

    and what Looks it like ??
    i dont understand what he means...can you make a pic of your Setup....?
    thanks for sharing this intresting Video....

    • @webberron
      @webberron 9 лет назад

      ebubekir yilmaz You can look at his link for more information...
      myspeakersetup.com
      Also you can do a Google search on Speaker Setup... There are many descriptive examples and lots of excellent photos...

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 8 лет назад

      +ebubekir yilmaz There are many pics on my site - myspeakersetup.com - they look a little weird right now as they are in the wrong aspect ratio - working on fixing that

  • @Audiojunkabus
    @Audiojunkabus 6 лет назад

    Unless you listen to all or mostly live music you need to use a cd/or album that you are familiar with and represents the style/type of music you mostly listen to. Live music as it is heard is a far cry from the many tracks created in the studio and then left to sound engineers to decide what "shape" the sound stage will be. The music is already processed when it gets to us. !!! A live show that is amplified and sent to various speakers at the venue is not a natural sound stage either now is it.? Music in a fine concert hall is one thing and if you listen to concert hall music and like that sound use a DSP and select concert hall :) . An acoustical live event or a recording on a single track with all music/vocals going at the same time is completely different vs a studio recording broken into separate tracks with musicians not even in the same building when recording/laying down tracks.. Again now a sound engineer will create a 'sound stage" with smoke and mirrors.
    Not all artists are trying to achieve a "live sound" because most live music sounds like crap and it's much about the experience at "the show". Also there is no perfect venue that covers every seat in the house unless it it not amplified via venue speakers and a true stage with individual amps for each musician (if not acoustic). Each instrument would have its own amp right next to each musician.
    Let's see what Alan Parsons says about Live vs Studio. IMO you would need to adjust your speakers for every single track you listen track to ever get your speakers perfect.
    We all need to get a life and use headphones more..... (I call BS on spending too much time on speaker placement)

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      The results of this setup technique work all day every day on my system, whether I listen to live, simple, complicated, or ultra-processed techno. I love people who insist on giving me shit about this setup process without giving it a chance or even experimenting with it. BS on speaker placement???? The way the speakers pressurize the volume of air in your room and your ears is the only connection you have with the music. I call BS on your entire reply.

    • @Audiojunkabus
      @Audiojunkabus 6 лет назад

      I love when really smart people come up stupid crap and think it is science.

    • @Audiojunkabus
      @Audiojunkabus 6 лет назад

      Spending too much time agonizing and never getting it perfect is what I am calling "BS" on, not speaker placement. Speaker placement is obviously VERY important. I did not mean to come at you or anyone else, just suggesting to the average person watching this to use audio tracks that are loved, played often and that which you think sound excellent while using headphones....then use that music to place your speakers ... just don't stay up for 48 hrs straight + and ignore your family while doing so.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      My process takes less than 3 hours - I do appreciate your explanation.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад

      This setup process is based on physics and how our sense of hearing functions - it is not stupid crap

  • @pihda77
    @pihda77 3 года назад +2

    this doesnt make any sense. when you get closer to one speaker that fires at the same SPL it will change middle phantom image. When singer signs she is only 1 sound source of sound instead of 2.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 3 года назад

      I agree the singer is just one source, but both speakers reproduce the sound of his/her voice. That's why, when the speakers are optimally set, the phantom center image remains true.

    • @ChasingTone666
      @ChasingTone666 8 месяцев назад

      It’s all snake oil. What you’re hearing is what will ALWAYS happen. It’s physics.

  • @michaelstark7962
    @michaelstark7962 6 месяцев назад

    Listening toyou islike listenting to jesus it seems too easy too simple almost not possible but it is reality of the right questions right answers the right way its all about listening with your heart to find your answers in life

  • @stevenm4319
    @stevenm4319 Год назад

    I still don't know how to do it.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 Год назад

      You can always hire me to do it for you. My work is fully guaranteed.

  • @greenecospace
    @greenecospace 6 лет назад

    Bob i send you a email to your email-adress, i have very big problems with the center image, i can´t log in the image ! i repeat your progress round 50 times ! And it will not work... the image drift every time to the speaker when i lean my head in his direction.
    Everyone can help me ?

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад +2

      Getting the center image to stay locked in when you move your head is THE most difficult and rarest things to get with this process. Some speakers, because of their dispersion patterns combined with the layout of the room and room acoustics, this effect will never happen. I'm not saying it will not happen with your set, but there is that possibility. It is best to only move one speaker (usually the right one) in order to remedy this problem. If, when you move your head to the right and the center image follows you, it means the right speaker is a little too close to you. Move the right speaker back VERY slightly until the problem goes away. This won't affect center image lock, but should fix what we're working on. If the image moves to the left when you do, then move the right speaker slightly towards you to fix the image drift. You may have to combine this with large amounts of toe in also. Once again, it may not happen for you - not every system can reproduce this characteristic.

    • @greenecospace
      @greenecospace 6 лет назад +1

      BOB now it´s work outstanding ! I bring the Speaker about 40cm closer together...more toe-in...and 75cm from the wall behind in the room....now the Speaker work as a unit....you the best man...i need a long time to do this perfect
      ruclips.net/video/M2DW5sLwfMI/видео.html

  • @islanddave1
    @islanddave1 6 лет назад +2

    This resource is no longer free.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 6 лет назад +2

      You are correct - it's been nearly 4 years since this video was made and after consulting with my business partner we both decided the set up procedure is far too valuable to give away for nothing. Compared to paying $1000 for some interconnects, or $200 for a fuse, the improvements in musical enjoyment and system synergy this setup technique provides for only $50 is the best bargain in hi fi.

  • @ttrons2
    @ttrons2 5 лет назад

    Why bother with a sub woofer other than for moves. You just need a three way with a minimum 8 inch woofer with a decent amp will fill any normal size room with great music.

    • @bobrobbins5652
      @bobrobbins5652 5 лет назад +2

      I'm afraid I need to disagree - the sonic signature, the sense of space of performance halls and/or recording venues resides in the infrasonic frequencies - frequencies we feel, not necessarily hear. If they are not reproduced, there is a huge amount of information that is the sense of space that we miss out on. Like the people from REL say - it's not about the bass, it's about the space. Also, if you think an 8" woofer can reproduce the deep bass that is in organ or techno music, you are borderline delusional

    • @mikefc55
      @mikefc55 5 лет назад

      basically I agree Tom but with two observations. Even the lowest music frequencies can be handled with most decent speakers with 8" drivers but the roll off can be steep below 60hz. So a nice little sub to fill in and add 3-6db around 40hz can sound very nice. Secondly, some "music" today has low end that did not come from instruments we know and love... think EDM, ..... lot's of energy below 40hz

    • @46wireboy
      @46wireboy 4 года назад

      Yeah, who wants those pesky lower octaves anyway...

  • @harveyjones4265
    @harveyjones4265 6 лет назад

    @ WILLIAMS 0