Exactly my experience. (Similar step up when I then added diffusion and absorption to the front wall)I finally got around to running my own test by placing the equipment between the speakers. I listened for a couple of weeks and had my audio bud come over to listen. I then put everything back where it was, behind my listening seat (that took a few minutes!). The differences were obvious to us both. With the equipment between the speakers there was a lessening of image specificity and of harmonic balance between the speakers (one sounded different from the other). Tried moving them around, but at the end of it all, my room just sounded better without the equipment between the speakers.
. . . But that means the cables to the monos have to run right across the entry threshold!So, is there such a thing as a “thruway” threshold cover that will let me run cables underneath it? Is this my best solution? As a reminder, it’s already decided the equipment will not go between the speakers.
Ron, do you have a picture of the solution? I’d love to se it!I think I have your exact situation. (Although my issue is the threshold between the listening room and the equipment room, not the entry door to the listening room.)
1) My floor is concrete slab, and cutting out channels of concrete to conceal the cables under the carpet was prohibitively expensive. Plus I did not like the idea of cutting into the slab.
2) Increasing the length of the interconnects to go up the side wall, across the top of the entry opening, and then down the other side made already long interconnects (50 feet) way too much longer.
3) I decided simply to drop the interconnects onto the carpet and place a walnut saddle over the cables and between the side walls of the opening to the equipment room
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