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There has been a long evolution in commercial movie theater sound. During the
first two and a half decades of movie theater presentations, a piano, organ,
orchestra, sound effects man, or actors reading the dialog comprised the sound
of movies. Electronic sound appeared in 1926 with the coming of the "talkies."
Theaters were wired for sound, and a big speaker perhaps set behind the center
of the screen did it all. This was the monophonic sound era. Then stereo sound
arrived in the 1940's with left and right channels. Additional sound channels
were added in the 1950's. (Somewhere in there, a center channel was added to
anchor the dialog to the center of the screen.) Finally surround sound came on
the scene in the 1980's in various versions adapted to the acoustic challenges
of the commercial movie theater. (The advent of DVD's brought affordable
surround sound to our home theaters.)
Home theater sound can follow any of these commercial movie theater approaches,
or it can move beyond to new levels of sonic realism and effects.
One important difference between movie theaters and home theaters is that movie
theaters must present acceptable sound to a (hopefully) large group of people
sitting at every location of a large room. In contrast, a home theater usually
serves a much smaller group of people sitting in a much more limited part of the
home theater space.
The limited size of the usual listening/viewing location in a home theater can
work to the advantage of home theater owners due to the nature of sound
reproduction.
To understand how sound reproduction bears on this discussion, let's start by
considering stereo sound.
In stereo systems, if a listener is closer to the left speaker, all the sound
apparently comes from the left speaker. If you have a stereo, turn it on and try
this: sit in a location equidistant from the two speakers and listen to a good
stereo recording with your eyes closed. Note the spread of locations the sound
appears to come from. Now move a few feet to the left of and then to the right
of center and notice how the sound which was spread across from left to right
collapses into "all left" or "all right". This failure of the stereo illusion is
unavoidable when you use just two speakers. This means there's always a "sweet
spot" (where the stereo effect works best) located on a line centered between
the two speakers in a stereo system.
By the way, purchasing more expensive speakers cannot overcome this effect, as
the failure of the stereo effect ONLY has to do with both the differences in
loudness between the two speakers (due to being closer to one than to the other)
and the difference in the time when the sound arrives at your ears from each of
the two speakers.
The center speaker in movie or home theaters is an attempt to override this
problem by placing a speaker in the middle of the screen for dialogue and other
sounds which the film maker wants to make sure comes from the center of the
screen, no matter where you sit in the theater. The center channel solves the
problem of stabilizing the dialogue but alas, any stereo sound being provided by
the front left and front right speakers will still seem to collapse to one side
or the other if a person sits well to the left side or the right side of the
theater.
So, now let's consider the surround speakers. In movie theaters, the sound
system designers are really stuck in a dilemma. Some audience members are often
sitting right under or right next to one of the surround speakers, which means
there's no hope of the person hearing the other surround speakers' output at the
correct volume and at the right time to get any sort of stereo effect from the
surround speakers. This is probably why the older Dolby Pro-Logic system rear
surround was only monophonic.
Instead, sound system designers for movie theaters apparently threw up their
hands and designed and arranged the surround speakers to:
- Really lag in time, (so the surround sound wouldn't arrive BEFORE the sound
from the main speakers, no matter where you sat)
- Arranged for those speakers to smear their sound all over the back of the theater to mask the problems caused by the great variety of audience/surround
speaker time and distance relationships.
Now, along comes home theater. Most home theater users don't fill the room with audiences, but the philosophy
of earlier commercial theater design is still being applied. You will observe
how some home theater rear surround speakers are designed to project sound in
multiple directions and how the set up manuals will often direct that the
speakers be placed to project their sound away from the main viewing location.
Here's the thing - if you want to reproduce the movie theater listening
experience, use the surround speakers which try to spread sound all over and
position those speakers to aid that goal.
But, if you want to enjoy the more accurate sound source positioning (the sound
appears to come from some exact location behind you, to your left, right, or
even overhead!) made possible by Dolby Digital or DTS, a different approach
should be used.
In this approach (labelled "Holosonic Sound" by Gary Reber
and the gang at Widescreen Review magazine
www.widescreenreview.com) the rear speakers are
placed behind the viewers at about the same distance from the main listening
position as the front speakers. They are usually somewhat further apart than the
front speakers. These surround speakers should be:
- Well matched to the sound quality (timbre) of the front and center speakers.
- Direct radiating, and pointed at the prime listening position.
- Capable of handling at least one-third to one-half the power that the front
speakers can handle.
- Located at a height at or slightly above the height of the ears of the
audience.
(To prevent sound from the rear speakers from being blocked by seatbacks, they
might have to go a bit higher. The viewer's ears must be able to directly "see"
the surrounds.)
Home theater owners whose seats are right back against the wall will have to
cope by placing the surrounds on the back wall facing the seating, but spaced
well away from the viewers (same distance from the viewers as the distance from
the front speakers to the viewers, if possible) to minimize the collapse of the
rear stereo effect if an audience member is not sitting exactly between the two
rear surround speakers.
Movie makers today are releasing films on DVD with sound that is designed so
that home theaters arranged to produce accurate stereo sound from good rear
surround speakers will really give you the feeling the you are inside the
action, with actors sometimes speaking behind you, and sounds moving right out
of the screen over your head.
How do you reliably adjust and test your home theater for the kind of
performance we're talking about here?
Easy! Order the AVIA disk from Ovation Software's website. (www.ovationmultimedia.com)
Study the materials presented on the AVIA DVD, and then follow the instructions
on the disk, or hire a pro to do the job after watching the DVD has helped you
to understand the outline of what has to be done. The audio portions of this
disk will assist you mightily in tuning up your system if you do it yourself. It
contains "circulating" audio test signals that circle around the room and if you
set up your theater for accurate surround sound, that test will show you how
well surround sound can work in your home theater.
It can be very satisfying to have better surround sound than the commercial
movie theaters.
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About The Author David Gibbons is a long-time electronics
technician interested in helping people get the most for their home
theater investment. For more of his common-sense articles, go to
www.sonic.net/~dgibbons. |
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