Five ways to improve your surround sound system

Five ways to improve your surround sound system
(Image credit: iStock)

If you want to improve your home TV-watching experience, investing in a surround sound system is a must. However, even once you've bought one of the best AV receivers and a surround sound speaker system, there are still more ways to get the most out of your equipment. 

These five tips are general principles to help you improve your surround sound system's performance:

Choose your room well

Square rooms are not good for acoustics. Audio experts say you want to build your home theater in a room whose width is 1.6 times the height and the room length is 2.6 times the room height. You'll also want to avoid hard surfaces that reflect sound waves. Carpeting your floor greatly helps your acoustics, and so does installing furniture.

Place your speakers carefully

All speakers should be at approximately head height when you're sitting, facing your listening position. You want the front two speakers and the center-channel speaker to be about the same distance from your listening position, although you can raise your speaker levels to compensate if you can't make that happen in your room (more on that later). Your surround speakers should be on either side of your listening position, and your rear surrounds (in a 7.1 system) should be behind your listening position on either side. You can place the subwoofer almost anywhere, because large bass sound waves can fill the room from any angle.

Calibrate your speaker levels

Most home theater receivers come with a microphone and a program for calibrating your speaker levels. These systems compensate for imperfect speaker placement and room size. They raise or lower the levels of the individual speakers to give you a balanced, immersive sound.

Use the best surround sound formats

Dolby and DTS both have lossy and lossless audio formats. The lossless formats are less compressed. They contain all the information that was in the original studio master track and thus sound better. Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master are the two uncompressed surround sound formats that you should use for the best sound.

Upgrade your equipment

It sounds like a cop-out, but it's not. There is no substitute for elite speakers and a high-end receiver. If you have to choose between upgrading your receiver and your speakers, upgrade your speakers. Speakers comprise at least 75 percent of sound quality, with amplifiers and source material comprising, at most, 25 percent.

Ian Stokes

Ian Stokes is the Tech Editor here at Top Ten Reviews. He has extensive experience in tech and games journalism, with work published on IGN, Kotaku UK, Waypoint, GamesRadar, Trusted Reviews, and many more. You'll find him covering everything from smartphones and home computers to 3D printers and headphones. He's also our resident cocktail expert.