Hi Mike,
glad that you are enjoying the new position. I think most of us understand the importance of speaker position relative to a room. I was trying to statistically see how close are folks for a particular rule - if every speaker is positioned differently and far away from a particular rule, what's the point of having a rule then ? Some will say its just a starting point but there are N number of rule and hence possibly N number of starting points. For example, mine are 6'.3" from the front wall in a room length of 19' - a far away numbers from the 1/5th rule, whereas yours and Jack's are going well with this particular rule.
Some says to find the listening position first but my speaker manufacturer suggest to find the speaker position first and then find the listening position. All setups I have heard with my speaker and done by the manufacturer sounds terrific to my ears.
I guess it all boils down to a combination of room, speaker and electronics used and there is no one particular rule to start with and experiment is the key. At one point I probably have experimented with all the "rules" that I could find on the internet (1/5th, 1/3rd, Cardas, WASP, etc) and other expert suggestions/books - I find the Nordost setup guideline/disc to be very effective.
Sometime changing gears can also lead to re-position of the placement. I am not done yet and still experiment when time allows....
Different strokes...
In over 800 successful room/system tuning sessions, including at shows (fortunately winning best-sound-of-show awards at 5 out of the 7 shows we did, and with speakers that had been ignored or disliked), at dealers and manufacturers, and of course with consumer clients, I have always found it necessary to first establish the Anchor Position for tuning the speakers to the room. That has
always meant finding the best listening position first, because that is where the bass is smoothest (working with the room rather than against it). It makes a powerful difference in musical dynamics (no boom at some frequencies, no missing notes at others), with dynamics being one of the major aspects of system playback that can pluck the heartstrings (musical engagement).
I have NEVER found any system that was set-up with ANY guide or technique - no matter how famous - that couldn't be greatly improved upon in a matter of a few hours, sometimes less. FWIW - Over the years, I've gone behind ALL of the famous guides and set-up techniques espoused by the "experts" as well as speaker manufacturers - at the request of frustrated clients - with the client always amazed at how much more alive and musically engaging their system became,
without buying another component. In fact, AFAIK, it's never failed.
Please understand - after looking at the above,
even I think it sounds like an ad. However, it's not supposed to be about me - and it's not rocket science -
anyone can do it with a bit of insight.
One more question/comment -
how can all of the guides/techniques be so different and yet all are supposed to be best? Just asking...
IMO/IME of course.