Equal dimensions are not good. But I would not turn it down to replace my 16' by 12' room.
I agree. Well, here's how I've done it over the last 17 years
:
Backwall clearance:
1. 5'(min.) to 7'
2. or 1/3 the distance into the room
either way is OK, it just depends on furniture/room layout. (My current room is 12x24. The speakers are in front of a freestanding bookshelf that's 8' from the back wall) click on system link
L/R spacing: No toe-in to start with, and 2' between the (inner) edges of the frames. Choose a listening position distance from the speakers. It has to be no less than 7' for CLS's (nearfield listening), but you
have to do this (choose the listening position) in order to proceed.
Slowly move the speakers apart (symetrically) by moving each speaker 8" . Continue until an
obvious "hole" appears in the soundstage. note: use large orchestra for this, not a solo vocalist. When the 'hole' appears, move the panels back together by 8" each until the soundstage re-establishes itself.
Toe-in: It
does matter that the wider of the two bass sections of each panel be to the outside -- otherwise it's impossible to achieve correct toe-in (which really has to do with focusing/aiming the midrange section), Next, get a strong flashlight or laser pointer. Sit in the listening position and hold the light next to your face at eye height (left side for left panel, etc.) and point it at the panel. Note where on the panel (mylar) the reflected highlight occurs. Then begin toeing-in the panel in using the same spike (inner or outer) for both L and R panels. (Don't use the spike under the electronics box to pivot the speaker, it's off center!) until the highlight falls about 3 or 4 inches to the
outside of the inside vertical spar (this is the way Jim Powers does it.) You may need to make some tiny adjustments after that, to each speaker equally, but
before you get into that:
It is absolutely
critical the speakers match
exactly tilt-wise (with zero tilt being preferable,) but whatever, they should match exactly. The best way to do this is to use a 2 foot to 4 foot long carpenters level placed vertically at the center of the center-section of the stator, adjusting the rear spike until both speakers are the same. Then, adjust the left/right tilt by placing the level along either edge of the wood frame and adjusting the left/right spikes until the speaker is vertical.
As far as I'm concerned the best place for a single sub is smack between the panels and set to a phase angle of 90 degrees (see my system) and a roll-off at 35Hz. Do
not high pass the panels! Let them roll off naturally.