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#441 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Speaker companies make their center channels horizontal because many/most people have their TV on furniture that can't house tower speakers or those tower speakers would block the view of the TV. If your layout can accommodate a tower center channel then by all means do it, but I think it's a bit dramatic to arrange your entire TV room around it or to propose that the difference between vertical and horizontal center channels is night and day. Theoretically the argument is there but practically I don't think you're suffering to keep the center horizontal.
Last edited by repete66211; 12-19-2012 at 05:44 PM. |
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#442 | |
Special Member
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A good coaxial speaker would be good for a horizontal CC. |
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#443 | |
Moderator
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#444 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Oh, it's a sound theory. The effect is real. I'm not commenting on that. My argument is that in the real world--your head isn't a microphone on a tripod--the effect isn't so dramatic as to justify designing your room around a vertical center channel. And let's not forget that shifting a horizontal-oriented MTM speaker vertically doesn't eliminate the effect, it just shifts it in a different direction. (I'm sure this is covered on the first page.) Of course this won't be a as much of a problem when the ears of all listeners are on roughly the same horizontal plane but if they were all sitting on a ladder....well that might be a problem.
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#446 | |
Moderator
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#450 |
Blu-ray Champion
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This curved baffle center channel speaker from Speaker Hardware is an excellent choice.
![]() Martin Logan makes excellent curved center channel speakers, but they are very expensive. |
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#451 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#452 |
Junior Member
Sep 2009
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The shape of the baffle does not appreciably affect lobing because the woofers are still horizontally aligned and reproduce the same frequencies. They act as two point sources and will inescapably have wave interference. It may not be that audible since they're crossed over to a mid, perhaps in the 300Hz area, but how they could have prevented lobing is to beef up that mid and lose the woofers. The vertical alignment of the mid and tweeter is where your money is going to reduce lobing out of the critical zone. If they can get the mid to respond to perhaps 60-70Hz, then the majority of its <80Hz burden would then be handed over to the sub.
Which then brings the fact that if the mid and tweeter could handle things on their own, then why not match their bookshelf profile to the L/R and then have identical timbre across the front? That Speaker Hardware may be an excellent sounding soundbar, but it can't have flat horizontal response with all those horizontally aligned identical drivers up in the critical midrange and treble zone. If it did, then you'd see some L/R configurations like that. It would sound much better rotated by 90 degrees and then purchase three across the front as vertical line arrays, although you'd still have wave interference across the crossover band. Cheers, Chris |
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#454 |
Blu-ray Champion
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I have listed the different options used by manufacturers to deal with MTM center channel speaker at the end of post #1. Curved center speakers is only one of the options and is used primarily by Martin Logan. Other manufacturers use other options that are simpler to build.
By far, the cheapest option is to use a two-way bookshelf speaker from the same line or place an MTM speaker vertically. The best option is to use three identical vertical front speakers that are placed at the same height. Unfortunately, that is not practical for most people as the center speaker blocks the monitor. ![]() ![]() ![]() Last edited by Big Daddy; 12-29-2012 at 12:05 AM. |
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#455 |
Member
Dec 2012
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I want to thank you guys for all the responses - great information. Big Daddy, a special thanks to you for taking the time to document a very difficult concept.
I now realize I have a lot more reading to do before I buy anything. I am in the process of upgrading my old system of 10 plus years. I have been using Mackie 824s for fronts and 624s for CC and rears driving them with an Anthem AVM-2. My sub is a Vandersteen V2W. This setup worked great in my smaller room; however, I've moved into a larger home and the system no longer sounds good for music - even though 5.1 movies still sound great. I thought I could do some rearranging and keep the Mackies as fronts and center (all sit on bridge and shelves of Salamander cabinet) but the room just swallows the sound even though I'm only 10 feet from speakers in a 20' x 16 room. I realize that Mackies are near field monitors but have been told they should work at a distance of 8 to 9 feet. I just wonder if I need to trash the entire system (keep sub) and get separates with floor towers that are not self powered. I would mate these with a decent preamp and amplifier, Emotive, Marantz, etc., that I could afford. Unfortunately, I would lose the fronts and CC being all vertical and from the same brand. Sorry for such a long response, but again thanks. This is a great forum! The Mackies are 2 way studio monitors with 2 separate power supplies and amps in each enclosure with active crossovers. |
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#456 |
Active Member
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#457 | |
Member
Aug 2012
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How about Paradigm's CC-690 its a very large center..
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#458 |
Blu-ray Champion
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The Paradigm CC-690 is a great center speaker. However, you are emphasizing the wrong thing. The performance of an horizontal center speaker does not depend on the size of the speaker. It is all about the arrangement of the drivers and the crossover to make the horizontal center speaker perform as well as a vertical center speaker.
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#459 |
Member
Dec 2012
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Would 3 Emotiva stealth 8's perform better than say Studio 100s for L&R with a CC-690 for a center driven by an Emotiva XPA-3. Thanks.
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#460 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Ideally, three vertically placed identical front speakers is the best option. |
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