Sure mix and match lots of folks do.
In my office I sometimes stack because that way I can have a set of tweeters at ear level when sitting and another set at ear level when stand or walking around.
I understand your set up and why, but I thought the standard practice was to invert the top pair? Aren't the tweeters closer together that way?
Can you mix and match speakers? Any other speakers?
.
If you are into critical listening and sit in the sweet spot, stacking will typically result in lesser SQ because you are introducing comb filtering and such.
I understand your set up and why, but I thought the standard practice was to invert the top pair? Aren't the tweeters closer together that way?
Again, it depends on what you hope to accomplish. If you are listening from one general location, you want all the tweeters at ear level. Then you would invert the top speaker so the tweeters are closer together.
When it comes to stacking, there is no one way. It is best to experiment to see what configuration gives the best sound.
So, basically, in a 12x10 man cave, negligible...
Seems stacking doesn't really improve anything.
So, basically, in a 12x10 man cave, negligible...
Seems stacking doesn't really improve anything.
Try it and see. Assuming you already own the equipment, nothing to lose by trying.
L100 Centurys on top of Pioneer CS-88As it is.....I'm not carrying anything else from the basement to the second floor...
This stacking business seems way more trouble than it's worth. Hard to hear a difference over my rapid heartbeat and labored breathing.
It was a selling point for the Advents. They wanted you to do it. Instead of a more expensive set of speakers, two pairs of stacked Advents were their high end line.Good to know. It just seems like all I ever see mentioned is the Advents.
sounds like my dad.Like the working TV on top of the larger wooden cabinet non-working TV method?