Guess my hesitation for embracing the Ultra 9 (with its 30” depth) stems from real-world constraints concerning room size, placement inflexibility, proximity to the front wall, standing wave bass room nodes, etc.
Currently, I’m enjoying a happy speaker placement and listening position configuration, one of which achieves the Rule Of Thirds:
Distance between front and back wall: 22ft 5in
Front panel of the VR-55 Aktives: 26% away
Listening position: 66% away
Together with this placement geometry, I’ve treated the listening room extensively, with one ton of prime-17 quadratic diffusers and diaphragmatic bass absorbers tuned to 40-80Hz on the front wall, plus another ton of prime-13 quadratic diffusers and diaphragmatic bass absorbers tuned to 40-80Hz as well as to a broader band 80-200Hz.
Augmenting all of this are four “anti-bass” active bass absorbers placed in four corners of the room to attenuate standing waves.
https://www.psiaudio.swiss/avaa-c20-active-bass-trap/
All of this resulting in the most articulate bass reproduction possible in my room, approximately 22ft (D) x 29ft (W) x 10ft(H) in its gross dimensions.
Placing a Ultra 9 in the same location of my VR-55 Aktives would result in its rear-facing subwoofer cone being just 3ft 4in (40”) away from the rear wall. And maybe just 1ft 6in above the floor.
Would you please comment on how a subwoofer located so closely to two major room boundaries can be tamed adequately to integrate well with the room?
Conversely, what is the minimum recommended placement distance from boundary walls recommended for the Ultra 9?