Ideal Monitor Distance
1.14 m
Offset from center: 0.99 m | Toe-in: 0 deg
Подробное руководство скоро
Мы работаем над подробным учебным руководством для Studio Monitor Placement Calculator. Вернитесь позже для пошаговых объяснений, формул, реальных примеров и экспертных советов.
The Studio Monitor Placement Calculator uses the equilateral triangle rule and acoustic physics to determine the optimal placement of studio monitor speakers relative to the mix position (the engineer's head) for the most accurate stereo imaging, frequency response, and time-coherent listening experience. Proper monitor placement is fundamental to making reliable mixing decisions — a poorly placed pair of monitors introduces comb filtering from early reflections, asymmetrical stereo imaging, and bass buildup from boundary effects that mislead the engineer into making incorrect EQ and balance decisions. The equilateral triangle rule states that the two monitors and the engineer's head should form an equilateral triangle, with each monitor pointed inward so that the tweeters form a vertex aimed precisely at the engineer's ears. The distance from each speaker to the listening position should equal the distance between the two speakers, and each speaker should be angled inward at 30 degrees from the forward axis (60-degree total angle). This places the engineer in the center of the stereo soundstage where left-right imaging is most precise. The calculator also computes the ideal monitor height (tweeter at ear level when seated), the critical distance (the point at which room reflections become equal in level to the direct sound from the monitor), and the recommended monitor-to-wall distances to minimize boundary effect bass buildup. The boundary effect (also called the half-space loading effect) boosts bass frequencies when a speaker is placed close to a wall, causing the mix to sound bass-heavy in that room but thin everywhere else.
Equilateral Triangle: Speaker Spacing = Listening Distance (all three sides equal) Angle per speaker: ±30° inward from the center axis Critical Distance: Dc = 0.057 × √(V × Q / RT60) Boundary Effect Distance: Keep monitors > λ/4 from walls (λ = speed of sound / frequency)
- 1Step 1: Measure your seated ear height from the floor (typically 1.1–1.2 m).
- 2Step 2: Choose a comfortable listening distance (typically 1.0–1.5 m from head to speakers in a home studio).
- 3Step 3: Set speaker spacing equal to the listening distance (equilateral triangle).
- 4Step 4: Position monitors so tweeter centers are at the same height as your ears.
- 5Step 5: Angle each monitor inward by 30° from the forward axis toward the mix position.
- 6Step 6: Keep monitors at least 0.5–1 m from side walls and at least 0.5 m from the front wall.
- 7Step 7: Check that the room's RT60 at the listening position is short enough (< 0.35 s) for accurate monitoring.
At 1.2 m listening distance, speakers should be 1.2 m apart (center to center). Each speaker toes in 30° toward the engineer. Position the desk so this triangle fits comfortably.
In a professional room, mid-field monitors at 2 m require the room to have short enough RT60 that the critical distance exceeds 2 m. Otherwise direct-field listening at 1.2 m is more accurate.
λ/4 at 280 Hz = 344m/s ÷ 280Hz ÷ 4 = 0.307 m. A monitor 30 cm from the front wall will have a cancellation notch at ~280 Hz due to destructive interference between direct sound and front wall reflection.
The tweeter (not woofer) should be at ear height. Use adjustable speaker stands and measure carefully. Tilting monitors slightly downward can compensate if the stand is slightly too tall.
Setting up a new recording or mixing studio, representing an important application area for the Studio Monitor Distance in professional and analytical contexts where accurate studio monitor distance calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Optimizing home studio monitoring accuracy, representing an important application area for the Studio Monitor Distance in professional and analytical contexts where accurate studio monitor distance calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Acoustic consultant room design specifications, representing an important application area for the Studio Monitor Distance in professional and analytical contexts where accurate studio monitor distance calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Evaluating new monitor speaker purchases with correct placement, representing an important application area for the Studio Monitor Distance in professional and analytical contexts where accurate studio monitor distance calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
5.1 and Dolby Atmos mixing room configuration, representing an important application area for the Studio Monitor Distance in professional and analytical contexts where accurate studio monitor distance calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
5.1 Surround Monitoring
The center channel should be centered between L and R monitors equidistant from the engineer. Rear surrounds are placed 110°–120° off-axis from the engineer. The subwoofer can be centered on the floor or positioned per the LFE mixing standard.'}
Mono Compatibility Check
In the Studio Monitor Distance, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting studio monitor distance results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when studio monitor distance calculations fall into non-standard territory.
When using the Studio Monitor Distance for comparative studio monitor distance
When using the Studio Monitor Distance for comparative studio monitor distance analysis across scenarios, consistent input measurement methodology is essential. Variations in how studio monitor distance inputs are measured, estimated, or rounded introduce systematic biases compounding through the calculation. For meaningful studio monitor distance comparisons, establish standardized measurement protocols, document assumptions, and consider whether result differences reflect genuine variations or measurement artifacts. Cross-validation against independent data sources strengthens confidence in comparative findings.
| Room Size | Monitor Type | Listening Distance | Speaker Spacing | From Front Wall |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bedroom (< 15 m²) | Near-field 5" | 0.8–1.2 m | 0.8–1.2 m | 0.5–0.8 m |
| Home studio (15–25 m²) | Near-field 8" | 1.0–1.5 m | 1.0–1.5 m | 0.6–1.0 m |
| Project studio (25–40 m²) | Mid-field 8" | 1.5–2.0 m | 1.5–2.0 m | 0.8–1.5 m |
| Pro control room (> 40 m²) | Mid/main field | 2.0–3.0+ m | 2.0–3.0+ m | Soffit-mounted |
| Mastering studio | Precision 3-way | 1.5–2.5 m | 1.5–2.5 m | Custom design |
Why does the equilateral triangle rule work?
The equilateral triangle creates the optimal listening position for stereo imaging for several reasons. At 30° per side (60° total angle), the psychoacoustic cues that the brain uses to localize left-right positioning are most reliable. The equal distances from each monitor to the ears ensures that left and right channels arrive simultaneously with identical levels, producing a precise center image. Moving closer than the equilateral position causes the stereo image to narrow; moving farther causes it to widen and become dependent on room reflections.
Should my monitors be on the desk or on stands behind it?
Mounting monitors on stands behind or at the sides of a desk is generally preferable to placing them directly on the desk surface. When monitors sit on a desk, the desk surface creates strong early reflections that comb-filter the frequency response. These reflections arrive slightly after the direct sound, creating peaks and notches that mislead the engineer. Studio isolation pads (foam wedges) can reduce desk-coupling vibration and allow slight vertical angle adjustment, but stands are the acoustic ideal.
How close should monitors be to the side walls?
The general recommendation is to keep monitors at least 50–100 cm from side walls to minimize side-wall first reflections that interfere with stereo imaging. However, in small rooms this is often impractical. When monitors are unavoidably close to side walls, using acoustic absorption at the first reflection points (the spots on the side walls where a mirror would reflect each monitor to your ears) significantly improves imaging accuracy.
What is the boundary effect and how does it affect bass?
When a speaker is placed near a room boundary (wall, floor, or ceiling), sound waves reflecting off that surface reinforce the direct sound at low frequencies, boosting bass output by approximately 3 dB per nearby boundary. A monitor in free space (away from all boundaries) has no boost. A monitor near one boundary (like the front wall) gets +3 dB bass boost. Near two boundaries (front wall and floor) gives +6 dB. In a corner (three boundaries) gives +9 dB. Most monitors are designed expecting some boundary loading and may sound thin without it, so experiment with distance.
What are acoustic isolation pads for monitors and do they work?
Acoustic isolation pads (like Auralex MoPADs or IsoAcoustics GAIA) decouple the monitor from its mounting surface, reducing mechanical vibration transmission from the speaker enclosure to the desk or stand. This can improve bass clarity by preventing the desk from acting as an acoustic radiator. IsoAcoustics stands in particular have received positive reviews for improving bass definition in near-field setups. They also allow minor angle adjustments. While not a substitute for proper room treatment, isolation pads are a low-cost improvement for desk-mounted monitors.
Should my monitors be flush-mounted in a soffit?
Soffit (flush) mounting — where monitors are built into the front wall of the control room — eliminates the diffraction effects of the speaker cabinet edges and the boundary effect fluctuations that come from varying the distance between a free-standing speaker and the wall. Flush-mounted monitors behave predictably in a half-space (2π steradian) instead of full-space (4π steradian), making the bass response easier to control. World-class studio designs (like those by John Storyk, George Augspurger, and Wes Lachot) typically include flush-mounted main monitors, though near-field references on stands are always used alongside them.
What is critical distance and why does it matter?
Critical distance is the point where the direct sound from the speaker and the reverberant sound field of the room are equal in level. Beyond the critical distance, the room acoustics dominate what you hear rather than the speaker. For accurate monitoring, your listening position must be within the critical distance of your monitors — typically well within 2 m in most project studios. A room with longer RT60 has a shorter critical distance, meaning room acoustics intrude on monitoring accuracy at closer distances.
How should I position a subwoofer relative to satellite monitors?
Subwoofer placement is more flexible than satellite monitors because bass frequencies are largely omnidirectional (non-directional) below approximately 80–100 Hz. Common placements include: on the floor centered between the two satellite monitors, on the desk between the monitors (with caution about coupling resonance), or in a corner for maximum bass reinforcement (though this requires significant level reduction). Use the crossover frequency to blend the sub seamlessly with the satellites, and always verify bass imaging accuracy using reference tracks with known low-end content.
Совет профессионала
Use a laser level or tape measure to verify that your two monitors are precisely equidistant from the sweet spot. Even a 2–3 cm asymmetry can shift the stereo image to one side, causing you to overcorrect in the mix.
Знаете ли вы?
The legendary NS10M studio monitor by Yamaha — used in nearly every professional studio worldwide from the 1980s through today — was actually a failed consumer hi-fi product that became a studio standard purely by accident. Engineers discovered that mixes that sounded good on the harsh, unforgiving NS10 tended to translate well to any consumer system.