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Newbie on HT
#131920 03/15/06 01:48 PM
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fearFX Offline OP
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Hi All... I'm planning on buying some Axiom speakers after reading so much postive review on them. My room is about 1500cuft and one side open up to the kitchen and the other to a hallway. I'm ready to dump my so called ht system Bose 321(I know it sucks)and going with a 5.1 setup.
I want the M60 but I dont have enough room for it plus my wife thinks its too big. So I might go with M22, QS8, VP150 and EP350 sub.
My questions are:
1. Is the VP150 an overkill if my viewing distance is 10-12ft? Will it match the M22 nicely?
2. Is it ok to place my surrounds 4ft above ear level(sitting down)?
3. Since my couch is agaist the wall should I place the surrounds on the side or at the back wall?
4. I'ved listened to Deftech BP7006 bipolar speakers and they sounded real nice but too expensive. Compared to these speakers, what can I expect from the M22?

Thanks, All your input will help me very much.


M60 VP150 QS8 PV1000 DPR2005 Oppo
Re: Newbie on HT
#131921 03/15/06 02:02 PM
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Welcome, FearFX,

Before I do my best on your questions, something you might consider is that by the time you add stands for the M22s (much mo' betta than placing them on shelves or in entertainment centers), they will take up almost as much room as the M60s, though not seem as massive.

1. VP150 would NOT be overkill, and yes, it would match the M22s just fine.

2. Yes, The QS8s are very forgiving when it comes to placement. From the Axiom FAQ:

Ideally, surround speakers should be either wall-mounted or stand-mounted to either side of the couch or primary listening area, from one to six feet higher than seated listeners' ears, and slightly forward or rearwards of the listening area if you wish. Axiom's Quadpolar surrounds are especially versatile and can yield excellent performance with stand or wall-mounting to the rear as well as at side locations. (see our dedicated stands for the QS Surround speakers in the Store). Rear center speakers for 6.1 and 7.1 installations are intended to go on the rear wall at about the same height as the surround speakers..

3. Either the side wall or the back will work. If you can, experiment to see which placement you prefer.

4. I'm no help on this one. I've never heard the Deftechs.


Jack

"People generally quarrel because they cannot argue." - G. K. Chesterton
Re: Newbie on HT
#131922 03/15/06 02:56 PM
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Hi fearFX,

1. No, but you don't need a VP150 for that room size and listening distance unless you want extremely loud playback levels. The VP100 is just fine for an application like yours.

2. Perfect height.

3. On the side. Set up a good 5.1 system with the surrounds located where they're intended to go, just like in large cinemas. You can try a couple of extra surrounds on the back wall for 7.1 later on and see if there's any improvement.

4. It's very hard to make comparisons of bipolar front speakers with direct-radiating models. In the old days of 2-channel stereo, I used to love bipolar speakers because with large acoustical works (orchestral, choral, jazz, big band), bipolars gave a big, diffuse soundstage (with somewhat vague, murky imaging) that more closely approximated what I heard in real concert halls.

But bipolars, in my judgement, are inappropriate for the front channels in surround systems. You want precise imaging at the front so sounds move with screen action, and the M22s will deliver that as well as a nice sense of depth if it's in the original source recording. The surround speakers provide all the ambience and spatial properties, and the Axiom quadpolar QS4/QS8s are exceptional in this regard.

One of the virtues of compact speakers like the M22s in smaller rooms is the versatility of placement. Because they don't have deep bass output (the subwoofer supplies that), you can actually put them on an open bookshelf. Nor do they interact with nearby room boundaries as much as floorstanding speakers.

Regards,


Alan Lofft,
Axiom Resident Expert (Retired)
Re: Newbie on HT
#131923 03/16/06 02:00 AM
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Fear, another welcome. Besides the previous replies, I'll comment that your surrounds in a 5.1 setup would ideally be on the side walls and a couple of feet farther back than the sitting position. Because of being a little behind they can also give a little back surround effect(since there won't be back surround speakers to do it)by "phantom" imaging sounds that are about equal in level in both speakers. Since you're going to be sitting almost right up against the back wall, that arrangement can't be exactly followed, but the closest would be to put the QSs on the back wall and separated as widely as possible, to within a foot of the side walls.


-----------------------------------

Enjoy the music, not the equipment.


Re: Newbie on HT
#131924 03/16/06 02:00 AM
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fearFX Offline OP
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Thanks Alan and Ajax for the quick reply, I will place the M22 in the entertainment center so it will not take more space. If I have the room I will really like the M60's.

I heard good things about the SVS sub's, any of you guys got this sub and how it mate with M22's. Is the PB10 comparable to EP350?

Thanks again and looking forward to join the family.


M60 VP150 QS8 PV1000 DPR2005 Oppo
Re: Newbie on HT
#131925 03/18/06 03:39 PM
Joined: Mar 2005
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local
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I've got the svs pb10 mated with M22, vp100 and pair of qs8's in a room your size, have had the system for nearly a year now and love it. SVS is an excellent sub manufacturer as is HSU and Axiom (particularly the 500 and 600 models IMO).

I probably get a little better sub response than you would because my room doesn't open up to adjacent space like yours. This wouldn't be an issue for you during music play, but if you like major low frequency effects during movies you might want to consider a larger sub. The room volume versus sub size (amount of air it can push and thus pressurize your room) is what creates the chest pounding effect.

good luck.

Re: Newbie on HT
#131926 03/18/06 04:57 PM
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"I will place the M22 in the entertainment center so it will not take more space."

Oh, no! If you can help it, don't put the M22's in the entertainment center. Here's a good explantion from MIKEY in a recent thread that basically eplains why not to do so. Yes, in this case, you will probably need stands. Therefore, you might as well get the M60's, huh? Regardless, you've got a nice system coming your way. We just want you to enjoy it to it's fullest!

EDIT: In Alan's reply, he said it's OK to place them in an "open bookshelf", whatever that is. Hmmm...he's the expert, but I still feel that *something* besides bass will be compromised putting them in an enclosure.

Last edited by sonicfox; 03/18/06 05:08 PM.

M60s
VP150
QS8s
Marantz SR6003
Samsung LN52B550
Oppo DV-980H
Insignia NS-WBRDVD
Re: Newbie on HT
#131927 03/19/06 05:38 AM
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fearFX Offline OP
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Sonicfox... my E.center is not an enclosure, it opens up to all 4 sides something similar to this http://www.furniture.com/common/product/ProductInfo.aspx?itemid=0&ChildId=118472&xs=687155efbfb-0fd6-41f4-8630-c06bc10ff4ea , so I wont be hurting the speakers.

PaulM... I'm thinking of getting the vp100 instead on the 150 and use the money saved to get a bigger subwoofer. But I read somewhere in this forum that the 150 is more forgiving in sound relative to sitting postion than the 100. In your set-up, how true is this?


M60 VP150 QS8 PV1000 DPR2005 Oppo
Re: Newbie on HT
#131928 03/19/06 01:07 PM
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I have noticed that the center does a lot of "work" in my HT setup. I would suggest that you get the 150 over the 100. You can always get the sub later.

Just a thought.


The Rat. M80s, VP-150, QS8s, SVS PC 20-39+, OPPO, Onkyo 703s, Harmony 880 Sony 60" SXRD HDTV
Re: Newbie on HT
#131929 03/19/06 04:06 PM
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"Life is what happens while your busy making other plans" John Lennon
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