Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (2024)

Speaker Placement

The Cardas Speaker
Placement Guide
Cable / Connector / Etc. FAQ
Setting Up Speakers in a Rectangular Room
The Near Field Listening Position
Golden Cuboid Listening Room
Dimensions Expressed in Golden Ratio
Dimensions Expressed in Fibonacci Sequence
Dimensions Expressed in Fibonacci Progression
Horizontal Listening Room
Square Listening Room
Golden Trapagon
Speaker Placement Calculators

Acoustic consultants do not offer free advice, however their input is often well worth the cost. A good one

in our particular corner of the world is Acoustic Sciences Corporation. Howevertherearelikely similar

companiesin your area.

Some helpful forums on this topic:

https://www.gikacoustics.com/acoustic-advice/

https://www.acousticfields.com/acoustics-forum/

https://www.audioasylum.com/forums/rives/bbs.html

Consultants

Rectangular Room

The Cardas Speaker
Placement Guide

Setting Up Speakers in a
Rectangular Room
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (2)

Very precise speaker placement can open up a whole new dimension in listening, so I will outline the system that is becoming the standard of the industry. This standardized listening room is a Golden Cuboid and is the model for the math used in this system. This method will work with any box speaker, in any reasonably sized rectangular room. You may find that you have already positioned your speakers this way by ear.

Active nodes are the main concern when placing speakers in a rectangular room. A node, or the frequency where speakers and parallel walls interact, is proportional to the speaker to the wall distance.

The three most importance nodes, in order of importance, are proportional to the distance between the speaker and:

1. The side wall nearest the speaker
2. The rear wall
3. The side wall across from the speaker

A secondary factor is the speaker-to-speaker time constant.

When you use this Golden Ratio method to set your room up, the speakers are placed so the three nodes progress or differ from one another in Golden Ratio. This eliminates any unison or near unison resonance in the nodes.

Panel or dipole speakers such as Apogees and Magnepans cancel their side waves, so a formula of .618 x the ceiling height can be used for determining placement from the rear wall. Most box speakers radiate low frequencies in all directions thus a formula that places the speaker to rear wall distance at 1.618 the side wall distance should be used.

Speaker placement, simply stated:

The distance from the center of the woofer face to the side walls is:

Room Width times .276 (RW x .276)

The distance from the center of the woofer face to the wall behind the speaker is:

Room Width times .447 (RW x .447)

This is all you need to know to place speakers in a symmetrical, rectangular room!

The Near Field Listening Position
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (4)

In the near field position the speakers and the listener’s head are the points of an equilateral triangle. Near field listening gives the perfect stereo field. It is frequently used in the recording studio to position the microphones and the voice in the mix. The near field listening position is determined by the "center to center" distance of the speakers and the distance to the listener’s head. It does not refer to the room in any way.

The importance of symmetrical speaker placement in a small room cannot be over emphasized.

Once the speakers are set as close to perfect as possible, you must angle them slightly toward the listening position. This can be done by ear and usually a ¼ to ½ inch tweek will do. Box speakers generally require a bit more toe-in than planear speakers. You will be able to hear a center focused voice clarify when the sweet spot is hit.

Near Field

Golden Cuboid Listening Room Diagram
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (6)

The Golden Cuboid listening room is 10’ x 16’ x 26’ (Read 10.000 x 16.18033989... x 26.18033989...

Its dimensions differ in a Golden Ratio or Fibonacci sequence (5-8-13-21-34...).

The three major room nodes progress or differ in Golden Ratio and thus null rather than add or beat.

Golden Cuboid

Listening Room Relationships
Expressed in Golden Ratio
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (8)


The Golden Ratio listening room is a relationship of potential nodes or energy storage units and can be expressed as a ratio or Golden Progression, using the speaker to speaker distance as 1.

Golden Ratio

Listening Room Relationships
Expressed in Fibonacci Progression
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (9)

The Golden Ratio room set-up can be seen as a Fibonacci progression.

Fibonacci

Horizontal Listening Rooms
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (11)

If you are forced to place your speakers on the long side of a symmetrical, rectangular room, create a Golden rectangle in each rear corner. Your speakers can then be placed anywhere along a line extending from the outside rear corner through the inside front corner (Diagram F).


Golden Rectangles, 1.618 from the side walls x 1 from the rear wall, create diagonal lines for speaker placement in a horizontal room.

Horizontal

Square Listening Rooms
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (12)

If you have the misfortune to have a square listening room, as in the previous setup (Diagram F), create Golden Rectangles in the rear corners of the room.

Your speakers can then be placed along lines extending from the outside rear corners through the inside front corners (Diagram G).

Square

The Golden Trapagon
Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (13)


The Golden Cuboid (Diagram H) is the best "rectangular" shape for a listening room. If, however, you have full architectural freedom, a Golden Trapagon (Diagram I) is by far the favored shape. A Golden Trapagon has a Golden rectangle for the front wall behind the speakers, and the room progresses to a larger (by Golden Ratio in area) Golden rectangle back wall behind the listener.

For example, if the wall behind the speakers is 10 feet x 16 feet, the room would then be 26 feet long and the wall behind the listener would be 13 feet x 21 feet. Ideally, the rear portion of this room would vent into an attic space filled with fiberglass insulation.

The trick to a Golden Trapagon shaped room is it eliminates the problem of parallel walls and the slap and sharp nodes associated with them. The "sound" of this room is a decaying hologram of the original, not a slap. This decay is exponential, or higher, at all frequencies. The relationship between the height and the width of the room, at any point, is Golden Ratio. The cross-section area at the rear of the room is 1.618 times the cross-section of the front. In the example above, the ceiling height would be 12.72 feet.

The ratio of front height or width, to rear height or width, is 1.272 to 1. 1.272 is the square root of 1.618 or Golden Ratio. The progression of size at the ends of the room is a area relationship. The sound confronts the entire surface of the end walls at the same time, rather than progressively as with height and width. It is like tuning a guitar to a major chord, the side walls become the strings and the end walls are the bridge and tailpiece.

Golden Trapagon

Speaker Placement Calculators

As with the information above, these calculators will provide ideal speaker locations,

but do not take into accountfactorssuch asasymmetrical rooms, furniture,

window & door location, or spousal approval. Use the information generated

by these calculators as generalguidance, but realize they may give you

suggested speaker locations that simply aren't feasible in your room.

If you have further questions, please contact an acoustic consultant.

Conventional Monopole Speakers

Dipole / Planar Speakers

Calculators

Speaker Placement | Cardas Audio (2024)

FAQs

What is the golden rule for speaker placement? ›

Most box speakers radiate low frequencies in all directions thus a formula that places the speaker to rear wall distance at 1.618 the side wall distance should be used. This is all you need to know to place speakers in a symmetrical, rectangular room!

What is the 1 3 rule for speaker placement? ›

Rule of Thirds

This rule states that the distance from the speaker to the back wall is 1/3 of the length of the room. You yourself will sit at 2/3. You then exclude all standing waves. A standing wave usually causes trouble at about half of the room.

What is the 1 5 rule for speaker placement? ›

The Rule of Fifths states that you want the acoustic center of the speaker drivers 1/5 from the wall, and your listening position (your ears) the same.

What is the 38 rule for speaker placement? ›

The 38% rule says that in a rectangular room, on paper, the best listening position is 38% of the way into the room from the shortest wall.

What is the formula for speaker placement? ›

A number of sources have suggested formulas to find a rough placement. Here's one example - Where x is the distance from the sidewall to the center of the speaker and y is the distance from the back wall to the center of the woofer. 1) x = (0.277) x (room width), y = (0.450) x (room width).

What is the triangle rule for speakers? ›

Ideally, your listening position and the two monitors form an equilateral triangle. In other words, the distance between the left and right speakers and the distance from each speaker to the back of your head should be equal. A tape measure, a piece of string, or even a guitar cable will help you set up this triangle.

How do I position my speakers perfectly? ›

Angle your speakers inward so they're pointed towards the listener - more specifically, at a point directly behind the listener's head. If you want good sound across a wider listening area, then decrease toe-in. Increase or decrease the angle of your speakers a few degrees at a time until you hit that sweet spot!

What is the speaker 1-5 rule? ›

If at all possible, try to set everything up as follows: Speakers so that the baffle of the speaker is 1/5 of the length of the room from the back wall and 1/5 of the width of the room from the side wall (ideally the same distance from the side walls).

What is the optimal speaker positioning shape? ›

Start with a triangle

Stephen's first tip is to try to use an equilateral triangle as your basis for listening, to provide the “ideal listening position”. If you and the speakers are all the same distance from each other, it creates a starting point for where you want to be.

What is the standard speaker placement? ›

Install the first pair a few feet in front of your listening position, and the second pair a few feet behind you. Space them the same width apart as your front left and right speakers for a wide, powerful soundstage and smooth transition of sound.

What is the rule of thirds for speakers? ›

When that rule is applied to loudspeaker setup it calls for the room to be broken up into thirds: 1/3 of the room's longest dimension away from the front wall is where we place the speakers. That same measurement, as applied to the rear wall is where we place our seat.

How far should left and right speakers be from center speaker? ›

The left and right speakers should be between 22.5° and 30° from the center channel at the MLP. In figure two, there are two variations, 22.5° in red with black speakers and 30° with light grey speakers. 22.5° forms a 45° angle between the left and right speakers, while 30° forms a 60° angle.

How close together can speakers be? ›

Speaker Separation

Aim for at least 4 feet of space between speakers for bookshelves. For Tower/Floorstanding speakers, some recommend 8 feet between each speaker, due to floorstanders generally being designed for listening at a distance.

What House rule removes the speaker of the House? ›

Removing the speaker of the House necessitates the use of a motion to vacate. As part of negotiations for McCarthy's speakership, any single representative can initiate a motion to vacate. The motion takes the form of a simple resolution. The provision had only been used twice in the House of Representatives.

How high should front speaker placement be? ›

The height speaker channels should be placed in the upper left/right corners of the front stage. Typically, this will be 40-45 degrees off-axis and about 8 feet in height. A downward tilt of the speaker will improve mid/high frequency response and reduce ceiling bounce reflections.

What is the golden ratio for speakers? ›

1 x 1.60 x 2.56 – The classic “golden” acoustic ratio.

What is the golden rule of speaking? ›

Establish a good rapport with your audience. Spark their interest in your subject. Maintain an information flow– Make sure your audience does not go astray. Keep them updated with the right information low and statistics.

What is the best way to position speakers? ›

Angle your speakers inward so they're pointed towards the listener - more specifically, at a point directly behind the listener's head. If you want good sound across a wider listening area, then decrease toe-in. Increase or decrease the angle of your speakers a few degrees at a time until you hit that sweet spot!

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