I've always read the deep bass is omni directional. This is why you can point a sub-woofer down at the floor. This is also why you can put a sub-woofer in a corner rather than centered beween the 2 main speakers. The theory being that the listener cannot tell where the bass is eminating from and will integrate into the main sepeakers regardless of placement.
But, my experience with the bass on my system does not comport with this theory. Now, I'm not using a sub-woofer, but I would expect the lowest bass registers hit by my main speakers to comply with the omni-directional theory. However, when I stand up or move significantly off center from my main speakers, there is significant audible change in bass tone. Primarily there is less bass, than when seated.
Now, I suspect that when seated (its a pretty low seat), my proximity to the room boundary (the floor), is changing the audible bass level. But when I move left or right of center, I am not changing my proximity to the floor, yet bass still is reduced.
So, is this just because bass is only really omni-directional in the very lowest bass frequencies that sub-woofers produce?
But, my experience with the bass on my system does not comport with this theory. Now, I'm not using a sub-woofer, but I would expect the lowest bass registers hit by my main speakers to comply with the omni-directional theory. However, when I stand up or move significantly off center from my main speakers, there is significant audible change in bass tone. Primarily there is less bass, than when seated.
Now, I suspect that when seated (its a pretty low seat), my proximity to the room boundary (the floor), is changing the audible bass level. But when I move left or right of center, I am not changing my proximity to the floor, yet bass still is reduced.
So, is this just because bass is only really omni-directional in the very lowest bass frequencies that sub-woofers produce?