Or does it just depend upon personal preference ?
I guess that there is more of a bass sound the lower it gets ?

Thanks Lucius1958.Lucius1958 wrote:Are you standing or sitting?
If the internal horn is at ear height or higher when you're standing, it's going to make it hard to reach the turntable. As for the bass, that's more a function of the horn's length than its position.![]()
- Bill
It is actually the opposite, I'm afraid. When a horn is placed in a corner formed by three walls the low frequency response is greatly extended in comparison to the same horn placed at the dihedron of two walls (or a wall and the floor), which in turn delivers an extended low frequency response in comparison to the same horn placed suspended in the center of a wall, which again in turn has an extended low frequency response in comparison to the same horn placed suspended in open space, which is the worst case scenario.Lucius1958 wrote:As for the bass, that's more a function of the horn's length than its position.![]()
Aha ! Thank you very much Marco Gilardetti.Marco Gilardetti wrote:It is actually the opposite, I'm afraid. When a horn is placed in a corner formed by three walls the low frequency response is greatly extended in comparison to the same horn placed at the dihedron of two walls (or a wall and the floor), which in turn delivers an extended low frequency response in comparison to the same horn placed suspended in the center of a wall, which again in turn has an extended low frequency response in comparison to the same horn placed suspended in open space, which is the worst case scenario.Lucius1958 wrote:As for the bass, that's more a function of the horn's length than its position.![]()
As already said, however, you'll have a hard time handling a tabletop gramophone placed on the floor in a corner.
About its height in reference to the listening ears, all horns are directional to some degree, and more or less all of them have a sonic "focus" point which, unless the horn has complicated shapes (asymmetric, split, re-entrant and so on), is usually approximately in front of its mouth. If you put your ears in the focus point, you should distinctly hear that the sound has more detail, just as if it was being played inside your head, or with a "headphone" effect.
Wether you would like to listen to the gramophone by standing in the focus point or elsewhere is a matter of taste. It tends to be more emotional when the record is fine, but it also tends to enhance defects and hiss of the record when the grooves are only so and so. High frequencies tend to be emphasised, also, which may feel exciting at first but may rapidly lead to listening fatigue. In other words, you have to try to move around the focus point and see what fits your taste better: there is no written rule, and each gramophone model sounds different too.
As a final note, if you place the gramophone on the floor in a corner, the focus point will also approximately be at floor level, which will make hearing quite uncomfortable.
Suppose you push the dinner table against the walls, and then you have created an artificial corner!Inigo wrote:A nice way to listen to a tabletop gramophone is when placing it at one end of a dinner table, and sitting at another place at the table, in front of the machine horn. The table acts as the reflecting baffle, and the sound conveyed to you it's most pleasing.