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FREESTANDING MONITORS |
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Walls Reflections Reflections from the room boundaries interfere with the direct sound from the speakers causing acoustic distortion. A free standing speaker is almost always surrounded by surface boundaries that will generate reflections. These boundaries act as acoustical mirrors to the direct sound, enhancing or cancelling the direct sound, depending on the phase difference between the reflection and the direct sound at the listening position. Boundary reflection problems reduce as the frequency increases. This is because the speaker directivity increases with frequency and is why the boundary reflections mainly cause problems at lower frequencies. The most common problem at low frequencies is the interference between the direct sound and the reflection from the wall behind the speaker. At low frequencies this reflection is in phase with the direct sound causing large peaks in the frequency response. At a particular frequency the reflected sound will be delayed so much that it will be 180° out of phase with the direct sound. Depending on the relative amplitudes of the direct and reflected sounds, a cancellation dip (6-20 dB deep) will occur in the frequency response. |

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One way of overcoming this problem is to position the speakers far enough away from the walls to move the first order cancellation dip below the lower cut-off frequency of the speaker. To move the cancellation dip to even 50Hz, the distance needed would be around 1.7m. In a stereo pair it is Extremely Important that they have MATCHED frequency responses to produce an exact, accurate, stereo image. The wall reflections change the frequency responses of the speakers DIFFERENTLY if they are at a different distance from the walls. It is also Extremely Important that the speakers are positioned with exact symmetry in the listening room to maintain similar frequency responses for both speakers. This obviously implies that the listening room itself should be symmetrical along the axis between the speakers to fulfill this requirement. Another method would be to place the speaker as close to the wall as possible to decrease the time delay of this reflection relative to the direct sound. This moves the interference problem to a higher frequency, where the speaker's own directivity decreases the rearward radiation and in this way the amplitude of the reflected sound attenuates. The resulting boost in the bass frequencies can be compensated for by using any room response controls that the speakers themselves may have. Speaker Directivity
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Summary
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