lol. I don't know if we've solved the OP's problem, but we've certainly covered some territory.
One thing I’ve pretty much always said about my setup is that I want it to be “pretty good.” I intend to keep improving it until I’m wheeled out of the house, but perfection doesn’t happen, even in a live performance in an excellent auditorium. Different seats will have different sounds, and maybe, just maybe, the conductor of an orchestra hears perfection, but if so, not often.Yeah yeah. Everyone does not have a room to "optimally place" all speakers. If you do, then good for you.
True, room correction will not fix everything.
Saying that room correction software causes distortion is shortsighted. Nor in all rooms can all the base speakers be exactly the same level.
What is not fun is your personal opinion possibly causing others to forgo immersive sound because they can't set their audio room up 100% ideal. Where is yours set up? A pro mixing studio? If so, how many others do you think have the flexibility to do this?
One thing I’ve pretty much always said about my setup is that I want it to be “pretty good.” I intend to keep improving it until I’m wheeled out of the house, but perfection doesn’t happen, even in a live performance in an excellent auditorium. Different seats will have different sounds, and maybe, just maybe, the conductor of an orchestra hears perfection, but if so, not often.
Great thought piece to ponder on the reality of working with the room you actually have versus the dream room that may never materialize.Perfect is the enemy of good.
When it did sound good -- which was on typical show audiophile tracks -- the experience was good. Alas, every track would sound similar with the same height and spatial effects.I have a small study/office, 13 ft. x 9 ft. I have found such a small area tough to use for upgraded sound. It's easier to use small speakers, but I wanted the better sound I get from larger speakers. I chose the Magnepan route, with 2 pair on-wall speakers, MC-1 for the front pair and MMG-Ws for the back pair, with an MG-CC3 center speaker. These speakers require an amp with lots of 4-ohm capacity, more than my Marantz AV receiver can put out, so I've been using a first generation Emotiva XPA-2 and a 3-channel Krell KAV 250a/3. I added an ELAC sub. The sound is the best I have obtained in this room.
Obviously, you would need more speakers, but I've been very satisfied with the performance of the wall-mount Maggies.
Just sayin'.
No LRS or any floor-standing Magnepans in my small room setup, only wall-mounted and a center Maggie. Totally different speakers. I found that the floor-standing Maggies, in particular the MMG, don't work in my small room. Too much like what others have called the "battleship in a bath tub" problem. Speakers must match the space.When it did sound good -- which was on typical show audiophile tracks -- the experience was good. Alas, every track would sound similar with the same height and spatial effects.
Conclusions
The Magnepan LRS is a hugely flawed speaker with moments of delight. If I could control what you listen to, e.g. in an audio show or dealer room, I could convince you it is much better speaker than it is. The best way I can explain this is that the designers solved 30% of the physics of building a speaker, and threw you in there to solve the rest! You take on the job of spending what must be a lifetime messing with location, tilt, EQ, etc. to get sound that is good for more than a few select tracks.
I am confident a better job can be done than what we see in LRS. Maybe making the panels smaller causes the beaming and interference patterns worse. I don't know. What I do know that this is not a product finished and fit for use by a consumer.
I wonder how much simulation and in field analysis was performed as I have shown here. Doesn't seem like much was done to find and remove issues with this speaker.
Needless to say, I can't recommend the Magnepan LRS.
https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/magnepan-lrs-speaker-review.16068/
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