
LooneyTunez
New member
The real reason why most speakers should not be placed on their sides is because of the comb filtering effects it can cause.
If you lay a vertically designed speaker on it's side, the sound produced by one driver has to travel through the other driver's path before it gets to you. This can cause all sorts of inconsistencies in the percieved frequency response of that speaker. This will be the case with just about any speaker where the tweeter and woofer are aligned. Horizontally designed speakers will usually have the tweeter offset from the woofer (either above or below).
There is some degree of comb filtering in a vertically designed/placed speaker as well, but human hearing is much less perceptive to this in the vertical plane versus horizontal.
Hope this helps.
If you lay a vertically designed speaker on it's side, the sound produced by one driver has to travel through the other driver's path before it gets to you. This can cause all sorts of inconsistencies in the percieved frequency response of that speaker. This will be the case with just about any speaker where the tweeter and woofer are aligned. Horizontally designed speakers will usually have the tweeter offset from the woofer (either above or below).
There is some degree of comb filtering in a vertically designed/placed speaker as well, but human hearing is much less perceptive to this in the vertical plane versus horizontal.
Hope this helps.