I’ve found by toeing my 846a’s so they cross about a foot in front of me and are about two feet from the back wall which has an alcove where my equipment rack resides I get huge depth over only a slight toe in, almost the opposite of your experience. They transport me to the venue. I have a very large listening room with a vaulted ceiling. The speakers are 9 feet apart and I sit 13 feet away from the speakers with five feet behind my listening position. To your point it really pays to experiment with placement. Mine are set on modified furniture dollies which puts the throat of the horn about a foot lower than my ear level which I’m sure mitigates any horn harshness but really helps the bass performance.
Sir, sorry I didn't get your name, although I did subscribe....informative channel...if I sent you a picture of my system, would you be able to comment with your thoughts?
I agree with this video using my JBL 4367. I think a lot of it comes down to the narrowing dispersion as you go up in frequency.
I’ve found by toeing my 846a’s so they cross about a foot in front of me and are about two feet from the back wall which has an alcove where my equipment rack resides I get huge depth over only a slight toe in, almost the opposite of your experience. They transport me to the venue. I have a very large listening room with a vaulted ceiling. The speakers are 9 feet apart and I sit 13 feet away from the speakers with five feet behind my listening position. To your point it really pays to experiment with placement. Mine are set on modified furniture dollies which puts the throat of the horn about a foot lower than my ear level which I’m sure mitigates any horn harshness but really helps the bass performance.
Good channel. However you need to lower the gain on your mic. All your videos’s have blow out audio from mic breakup.
Sir, sorry I didn't get your name, although I did subscribe....informative channel...if I sent you a picture of my system, would you be able to comment with your thoughts?