The trouble with my listening room: speakers weren’t made for it

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Sound+Image mag review

Sound+Image

(Image credit: Future)

This feature originally appeared in Sound+Image magazine, Australian sister publication to What Hi-Fi?. Click here for more information on Sound+Image, including digital editions and details on how you can subscribe.

I have a very wide room. In fact, in acoustic terms it might be considered infinitely wide, because each side is ultimately open, to the garden on one side, and on the other to a balcony which hangs over the edge of a rock drop-off. Both ends of the house remain wide open by day, and at night are closed off by insect screens, but nothing that will much constrain airflow. 

There is a lovely cool flow through this room, from right side to left side – of air, I would say, though our home’s previous owner, a yoga teacher, called it chi. So I am loth ever to pull across the brutishly heavy glass sliding doors and so sever that chi. It flows even during ‘Antarctic blasts’ (by which I mean any time Sydney drops below 20 degrees Celsius); only one side needs to be closed even for heavy rain. In only two circumstances are all doors fully slid shut so that we have an enclosed volume of air. Firstly during extreme heat (say 33 degrees and above) when the flow of chi turns fiery; we seal in the night’s cooler air and let the heat lick at the double layers of glass and insect screen.

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