I saw that too. Martin Logan gives the advice to toe in just enough so that a flashlight beamed from your seat to each speaker places the beam on the panel at a particular spot (on the outer third of the school panel). Others say toe them in to please you. Usually if you toe them out, you don’t improve the image. Your room is not wide enough for much toe in, and you do not want toe out.teb76 wrote: ↑Thu Dec 29, 2022 4:41 pm I've seen here https://www.audioholics.com/bookshelf-s ... -bookshelf they suggest to place 15 degrees off-axis. I'd like to find the same information for my current speakers... Is there a way to understand how to angle the speaker with respect to the listening point?
Also I'm surprised to see they are rotated toward the inner, I would expect to be rotate outward. Mine are currently slightly rotated outward with respect to the conjunction speaker-LP
Most often if you toe them in, the best seat will be at the apex of the isosceles triangle, or behind it.
For the Sabrinas, Wilson says that you should sit at about 1.1 times the distance between the speakers after toeing them in enough to just begin to see the outer edges of each box.
The answer to your question is to sit in your listening position, and evaluate what you hear when you make changes. Do not rush this process. Leave them in one position for several performances. Then adjust them and listen to the same material again. Do it as many times as you need to.
In the end, you do not have to please the microphone. You have to please your ears. If you can’t hone in on a preference, then it really doesn’t matter. You are trying to find what’s best for you, and if there’s no difference, or you don’t like any of it, that’s data for you to digest. Software isn’t going to help.