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Demonstrating Your Home Theater System:
When it comes to sound, all really good movie theaters have something in common. You can understand the dialogue. It's the properly set-up center channel that allows you to understand the film. The center-channel speaker is the heart of your home theater universe. By some estimates, as much as 85 percent of the movie soundtrack resonates from that speaker. You can place the center channel above or below the screen (ideally, so the tweeter is about the same height as in the left and right speakers). However, if that's not feasible, it is crucial that you tilt or aim the center-channel speaker toward the prime listening position. Little is worse than having the high frequencies fire at your ankles or over your head. It destroys the timbre and affects intelligibility. Some center-channel designs provide tilting mechanisms to properly aim the speaker. If your speaker lacks this provision, look around for one of your old VCR cassettes. With a little Scotch tape and ingenuity, they can serve as an improvised tilting platform. (Caveat: Make sure it's a videotape that you don't care about, because the magnets in the speaker could mangle what's on the tape. Also, if you have small children, large dogs, or live in earthquake country, be careful to secure the speaker properly.)
Subwoofers: Feeling the Lows
Don't Double-Cross Yourself
The Old Subwoofer Switcharoo
Getting Surrounded
Adjusting Your System: Avoiding Messing Up All Your Hard Work
Adjusting Your System
The Quick Way to Adjust Your System
The Better Way to Adjust Your System
Set the meter to Slow/C-Weighted and, from your seat, set all the channels until they read the same. Try pointing the business end of the meter at the ceiling and moving it back and forth slowly in front of you to obtain a spatially averaged reading. It is uncannily accurate, except in the bass. However, if you search the Internet, you will find easy-to-use charts that compensate for the bass error.
Maximizing Your Woofer Without Living in the Boom-Boom Room
tem at normal level with a male voice (Harrison Ford's is ideal). Keep turning up the sub until you can just perceive the lower registers of his voice coming through the sub (where it does not belong). Now slowly back off the volume until his voice disappears from the sub. The sub level is now most likely at its highest usable setting, and everything in the soundtrack will be close to optimal with no perceived lower-midrange chestiness leaking from the subwoofer. While this is a handy trick with systems with a crossover frequency of roughly 100 hertz and below, it may not be as effective with HTIBs and other systems with truly tiny satellite speakers and higher crossover points. Once you have calibrated the system, you are now ready to break the rules of your setup if you so choose. Here's an effect we enjoy, but you should experiment for yourself and see if you reach the same conclusion. If not, just reset your system to where you initially calibrated it. Our experimenting has convinced us that you can develop a great sense of acoustic space by adjusting two parameters. Turn down the calibrated center channel by as much as 2 decibels and turn up the surrounds by an equal amount. Bonus adjustment: If the center channel has a treble adjustment, or if the receiver has a dedicated tone control for the center channel only, turn it down very slightly. All of these rule-breaking adjustments tend to open up the room in a very subtle, though meaningful way. Your living room will sound a bit more expansive, yet the dialogue's intelligibility will be minimally affected.
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