7.1 or 5.1 with Pro Logic IIz

gtjackets13
gtjackets13 Posts: 12
edited August 2010 in Speakers
Hey all,

I am a recent new addition to Polk world after I bought 2 sets of the monitor 40's for the front and rear speakers, a CS10 center, a PSW505 sub as well as a set of monitor 30's to be used... somehow.

I just picked up the new Pioneer VSX-1020 reciever and an wondering if I should set up the monitor 30's as front height speakers above the monitor 40's or should place them behind by couch as true rear surrounds. Perhaps bite the bullet and get another set of monitor 30's to run the 7.1 with the additional 2 as heigh speakers (more or less 9.1).

It seems that neight 7.1 or Pro Logic IIz is really supported all that well, but at $100, I figured I would get the M30's just in case!

What are your opinions Polk world? 7.1 or 5.1 with height speakers?
Post edited by gtjackets13 on

Comments

  • cstmar01
    cstmar01 Posts: 4,424
    edited May 2010
    a well placed 5.1 will sound better than a cramped 7.1. I personally don't find a lot to be had with the height channels. Personally if I had the proper room I woudl just do a 7.1 or 5.1 and be done. The back channels for 7.1 are going to give your more information than height channels IMO (if using like PLIIx ect).
  • polkfarmboy
    polkfarmboy Posts: 5,703
    edited May 2010
    I think 2z is good for gaming and thats all plus you cant hear the height channels during most movies

    You could use any old crap speakers for height channels and wont be able to tell so I would advise against the 30's and spend a few dollars more for the 40's
  • kuntasensei
    kuntasensei Posts: 3,263
    edited May 2010
    I'm running 9.2 with DPL-IIz, and I disagree about not hearing the height channels during most movies. The effect is subtle... but then it should be until called for. Because of the way DPL-IIz decides what to put there, it is compatible with any movie made in the era of digital surround, primarily because mixers put ambient non-directional sound out of phase in the side surrounds as part of existing theatrical mixing guidelines. DPL-IIz uses that information along with directional data to place sound in the height channels. As far as the general effect this has, in my room it makes my mains sound like they extend from floor to ceiling. And when there's noise like rain or wind... WOW. Watching The Pacific this way has been KILLER.

    As far as whether to do rear surrounds or heights, if you're placing the speakers behind the couch, a proper 5.1 placement will probably image better. That said, I've had success in the past with placing speakers behind a couch, facing up. My rear surrounds are actually only about a foot or so behind my listening position right now, though they're placed very high and angled down... and it works great. That said... I suggest popping a couple of quick screws into your wall and try hanging height channels just to try them out. I did that out of curiosity and ended up keeping them. It's one of those things that you don't really fully appreciate until you've listened to it that way for a while and then take them away.
    Equipment list:
    Onkyo TX-NR3010 9.2 AVR
    Emotiva XPA-3 amp
    Polk RTi70 mains, CSi40 center, RTi38 surrounds, RTi28 rears and heights
    SVS 20-39CS+ subwoofer powered by Crown XLS1500
    Oppo BDP-93 Blu-ray player
    DarbeeVision DVP5000 video processor
    Epson 8500UB 1080p projector
    Elite Screens Sable 120" CineWhite screen
  • be83663
    be83663 Posts: 192
    edited May 2010
    I agree with Kuntasensei; he knows this stuff more than most people here.
    And make sure that when you calibrate your speaker system, using Audyssey, for example, do all the available positions possible even if you are not seating in those couple of places.

    9.1 or 9.2 speaker placements cannot be wrong for extra added surround effects.

    I prefer a PURE mode in my Onkyo pre-amplifier to just listen to whatever the movies are originally encoded for, for a more pure sound with less Total Harmonic Distortion, that processed sounds tend to have more of--5.1 sources for 5.1, 7.1 sources for 7.1, etc, instead of 5.1 sources for 7.1 or even 9.1, for examples. The sounds from the front three, two front and the center, speakers seem different when in Pure mode compared to processed modes such as THX Ultra II, Dolby EX, or Pro-Logic IIx. I think either way has pluses and minuses.
  • be83663
    be83663 Posts: 192
    edited May 2010
    I would get two pairs of TSi100 for the Front Heights and the Rear Surrounds, or two pairs of either R/T/M for half the price of TSi100. :)
  • kuntasensei
    kuntasensei Posts: 3,263
    edited May 2010
    be83663 wrote: »
    I prefer a PURE mode in my Onkyo pre-amplifier to just listen to whatever the movies are originally encoded for, for a more pure sound with less Total Harmonic Distortion, that processed sounds tend to have more of--5.1 sources for 5.1, 7.1 sources for 7.1, etc, instead of 5.1 sources for 7.1 or even 9.1, for examples. The sounds from the front three, two front and the center, speakers seem different when in Pure mode compared to processed modes such as THX Ultra II, Dolby EX, or Pro-Logic IIx. I think either way has pluses and minuses.

    Yeah, I can understand doing that, and if it works for you, awesome. For me, if you carefully set up rear surrounds, you get a sound closer to the way theaters with rear arrays sound, which I greatly prefer. But like a 5.1 setup, if you don't take care and spend the time to ensure proper setup, it's not going to work out so well.

    BTW, Monitor 30s work great for the height channels. I'm actually running a pair up there even though they don't match the rest of my speakers. The orientation of the speaker (tweeter on bottom) makes it well suited for hanging up high near the ceiling, and the sound is pretty impressive considering how cheap you can get 'em from Newegg. I was initially very skeptical about how DPL-IIz Height would sound, but it really does create a subtle "wall of sound" effect on the front soundstage, and when ambient effects kick in? WHOA! Any scene with rain or mortar fire in The Pacific has sounded insanely realistic. Can't wait to get Saving Private Ryan tomorrow!
    Equipment list:
    Onkyo TX-NR3010 9.2 AVR
    Emotiva XPA-3 amp
    Polk RTi70 mains, CSi40 center, RTi38 surrounds, RTi28 rears and heights
    SVS 20-39CS+ subwoofer powered by Crown XLS1500
    Oppo BDP-93 Blu-ray player
    DarbeeVision DVP5000 video processor
    Epson 8500UB 1080p projector
    Elite Screens Sable 120" CineWhite screen
  • Pappy1
    Pappy1 Posts: 63
    edited May 2010
    gtjackets13 - Thank you for starting this thread. I'm new to HT and had never heard of "height" speakers or the value of DPL-IIz. Kuntasensei - thank you for all of the information. I too really enjoy the military movie genre, as well as period dramas such as Pride and Prejudice. Not sure yet if I can do the "height" speakers - my AVR only has DPL-IIx - still investigating.

    Best Wishes!

    Pappy

    AVR - Pioneer VSX 9040TXH
    TV - Samsung HL-T6756W DLP
    BD - Panasonic DMP-BD605
    Cable - CableOne HD DVR
    Fronts - Polk Audio Monitor 70s
    Center - Polk Audio CS2
    Rears - Polk Audio Monitor 60s
    Subwoofer - Polk Audio PSW 505
  • kuntasensei
    kuntasensei Posts: 3,263
    edited May 2010
    Pappy, I wouldn't say DPL-IIz is worth running out and buying a new receiver for or anything... but if your receiver has it, it's worth checking out. Because ambient sound is mixed in the side surrounds out of phase, you can still get a pretty convincing height effect if your surrounds are higher up on the wall anyway. But if you have the gear for it, it's pretty damn nice!
    Equipment list:
    Onkyo TX-NR3010 9.2 AVR
    Emotiva XPA-3 amp
    Polk RTi70 mains, CSi40 center, RTi38 surrounds, RTi28 rears and heights
    SVS 20-39CS+ subwoofer powered by Crown XLS1500
    Oppo BDP-93 Blu-ray player
    DarbeeVision DVP5000 video processor
    Epson 8500UB 1080p projector
    Elite Screens Sable 120" CineWhite screen
  • gtjackets13
    gtjackets13 Posts: 12
    edited May 2010
    Thanks for all the feedback all! I think I am going to throw the M30's up as my height channels for a while and give it a spin using the 5.1 w/ height. Im going to keep my eye out on perhaps a set of M60's soon to use as the main fronts and use the 2 sets of M40's I have as the side and rear surrounds.

    For now, I'll be enjoying Saving Private Ryan (thanks for that reminder!) with the height channels.

    On the M60 note, I see the power rating is up to 200W; however, my reciever is only pushing 110 per channel. I know it will work fine, but is it worth buying that nice of a speaker if I really cant push them the way I want? Below are the two configs I would consider:

    (1) Center - CS10, Sub - PSW505, Height = M30, front and surround = M40, rear surround = M30

    (2)Center - CS10, Sub - PSW505, Height = M30, front = M60?, rear and side surround = M40's.

    I know the M60's are the better speaker, but without the ability to really push them, I feel like running 2 sets of M40's and 2 sets of M30's would be better...
  • over50
    over50 Posts: 201
    edited May 2010
    My 6.1 system is very close to the set up you are looking at. Power is not a problem, when watching a good surround DVD sounds better then at the theater .I just added the 505 and i cant believer the difference it makes. I think a good sub is under rated..I really enjoyed looking,gathering and desiding what componets to buy. Its a lot of enjoyment shopping for speakers,wires,avr,tv,and The tv stand that holds all of this..Have fun and take pride in your end result.
    Marantz SR 7007
    polkaudio RTi10
    polkaudio CSi A6
    polkaudio RTiA3
    B&K ST.3140 Power Amplifier
    HSU Research VTF2 MK3
    Vizio P65-C1
    Panasonic 605 blu ray
    Onkyo DS-A4 i-pod Dock
    Universal Remote
    BDI Icon 9429 TV Stand
  • cstmar01
    cstmar01 Posts: 4,424
    edited May 2010
    Thanks for all the feedback all! I think I am going to throw the M30's up as my height channels for a while and give it a spin using the 5.1 w/ height. Im going to keep my eye out on perhaps a set of M60's soon to use as the main fronts and use the 2 sets of M40's I have as the side and rear surrounds.

    For now, I'll be enjoying Saving Private Ryan (thanks for that reminder!) with the height channels.

    On the M60 note, I see the power rating is up to 200W; however, my reciever is only pushing 110 per channel. I know it will work fine, but is it worth buying that nice of a speaker if I really cant push them the way I want? Below are the two configs I would consider:

    (1) Center - CS10, Sub - PSW505, Height = M30, front and surround = M40, rear surround = M30

    (2)Center - CS10, Sub - PSW505, Height = M30, front = M60?, rear and side surround = M40's.

    I know the M60's are the better speaker, but without the ability to really push them, I feel like running 2 sets of M40's and 2 sets of M30's would be better...

    it probably isn't even getting 110watts to begin with. its not about power ect and just because it wouldn't get 200 watts doesn't mean that the speaker would possibly not preform better. Its a different design and will sound different (normally) when powered with the same amount of watts as a speaker or greater or lesser design. (even within the same model class)
  • Pappy1
    Pappy1 Posts: 63
    edited May 2010
    Hi Kuntasensei!

    Thank you for the advice. I appreciate what you have to say. At this point if was to add any more gear it would be an Emotiva UPA-2 to power my two Monitor 70s (I'm not sure that they are getting enough power).

    Pappy

    AVR - Pioneer VSX 9040TXH
    TV - Samsung HL-T6756W DLP
    BD - Panasonic DMP-BD605
    Cable - CableOne HD DVR
    Fronts - Polk Audio Monitor 70s
    Center - Polk Audio CS2
    Rears - Polk Audio Monitor 60s
    Subwoofer - Polk Audio PSW 505
  • Johnnybass
    Johnnybass Posts: 39
    edited August 2010
    Will the polk OWM3 make good Hieght speakers???
  • kuntasensei
    kuntasensei Posts: 3,263
    edited August 2010
    I don't see why they wouldn't. In fact, the ability to angle them down toward the listening area just about makes them perfect for height channels.
    Equipment list:
    Onkyo TX-NR3010 9.2 AVR
    Emotiva XPA-3 amp
    Polk RTi70 mains, CSi40 center, RTi38 surrounds, RTi28 rears and heights
    SVS 20-39CS+ subwoofer powered by Crown XLS1500
    Oppo BDP-93 Blu-ray player
    DarbeeVision DVP5000 video processor
    Epson 8500UB 1080p projector
    Elite Screens Sable 120" CineWhite screen
  • Johnnybass
    Johnnybass Posts: 39
    edited August 2010
    I don't see why they wouldn't. In fact, the ability to angle them down toward the listening area just about makes them perfect for height channels.


    I was thinking this also.Thank you:D