Instruction manual
The listening room 
Most people have relatively little control over their listening room in 
terms of size or shape, but as the environment in which the loudspeaker 
is used plays such a big part in the quality of sound we hear, some 
comments on room characteristics may be helpful before we proceed 
in section 3. 
There are two aspects of listening rooms which will most widely 
influence sound reproduction : The basic dimensions of the room and 
large items of furniture controlling the lower frequencies; and items of 
soft furnishing together with wall and other coverings affecting the 
middle and upper frequencies. 
All rooms have resonances, and so indeed does the concert hall, but 
in the case of the latter these are so low in frequency, and by design, 
so well spaced that they add ambience rather than colouration: The 
worst example in a listening room or studio would be the unlikely 
event of all dimensions being the same and the room forming a cube. 
The best case being a relatively large room where all dimensions are 
different. Fortunately the worst example is rarely, if ever, encountered 
but where a choice is possible as between a square or rectangular 
room the latter is to be preferred as the room resonances — known as 
eigentones — occur at spaced frequencies and are therefore of lower 
amplitude. 
The most pronounced eigentones occur at low frequencies below 
approximately 200Hz. In addition to these eigentones there is another 
important influence the room has over the lower octaves of reproduced 
sound. Due to the relatively small dimensions of the loudspeaker com-
pared with wavelengths of sound in the lower octaves, the radiation 
pattern or distribution of sound at these frequencies is effectively 
spherical. When operating a loudspeaker in a room, this sphere of 
sound is contained, to a greater or lesser degree, depending on position 
within a series of plain surfaces formed by the walls, floor and ceiling. 
This produces a factor known as 'room gain' and does in fact make 
the lower frequencies considerably louder than if, for instance, the 
loudspeaker were operated in the open air. 
As a result of research carried out into the "room gain" and how this 
affects loudspeaker performance, the stand of the DM70 has been 
specifically designed to give optimum results over a range of listening 
conditions. 
Before leaving the way in which the room affects the low frequency 
part of the sound spectrum, a word should be said on the construction 
The listening room 










