Depending on your room acoustics and the design of your speakers, you may need
to experiment in order to achieve the best effect.
GENERAL TIPS:
Make certain that there is nothing blocking any speaker that may muffle
the sound.
Position all the speakers at the same level; in other words, don't put one
on the floor and another on a bookshelf. This will cause a lopsided stereo
'image'.
Position speakers so that the tweeters (small speakers that reproduce higher
frequencies) are at ear level. This does not apply to subwoofers, because
low frequencies propagate in a fairly omni-directional manner, so placement
is not nearly as critical as with mid and/or high frequency speakers.
TWO SPEAKERS:
For computer audio, the best place to position a pair of speakers is on either
side of the display screen. You might want to try placing the speakers at ear
level, toed in at an angle so that they are pointing towards your ears for
best effect. Both speakers should be the same distance from your head, and
positioned at the same level relative to each other. If the speakers are to
be placed within a foot of your computer monitor, you will need to use
shielded speakers that won't damage the picture tube or distort the image
on your screen.
TWO SPEAKERS WITH SUBWOOFER:
Position the satellites and subwoofer so that a monaural signal sounds most
like it is coming from a single speaker positioned at dead center.
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