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- #21
Remember your car is NOT your home theater. You sit at the extreme corners of a box/rectangle. So you are not at the center of the car. Thus, the need for center channel. If you just use right and left channel…then you need to DSP the hell out of it to balance the sound for all occupants because every occupant will be closer to one speaker set than the others...and that is a nightmare to balance out. You will need to aim your speakers correctly, esp the midrange and tweeter. And this is why a lot of the mid-range and/or tweeter of most high-end factory systems aim up into the “acoustic” windshield to bounce sound to the whole cabin. The goal is to provide balance sound for every seat in the house. You will have a hard time with just left and right channels...if you aim for the driver only to get good sounds, then passengers will suffer from lateralization and poor stage.
So, your car is NOT your recording studio nor your home. It is much harsher environment and poor seating.
From an audio engineering standpoint, there's no technical argument for a center channel speaker here. As you said, people are seated in the corners of a rectangle, meaning if you want perfect time/phase alignment for one listener, it is not physically possible for the other listeners to have perfect time/phase alignment. A center channel may improve this a bit, or even a lot, but the extent to which it does so will be the extent to which the stereo field / sound stage is compromised by what is usually a summed mono center. Some higher end DSP do a highly processed mono center, but that's a whole other can of worms and not really pertinent to the question of TA/phase. For example, in this ASCII outline, D is the driver and P is passenger, L C R are speakers.
L------C------R
--D---------P--
If C is playing L+R summed, then D's stereo field is skewed to the right and P's stereo field is skewed to the left. If the volume of L is increased to move D's field closer to the center, then P's field is skewed even further to the left.
If TA/phase tuning is done to favor D, then P will hear phase decoherence. If C is turned up to compensate for this, P will get better phase coherence, but now D will be hearing more summed mono C and less stereo, along with a stereo image skewed to the right.
There's a reason you'll never see a C channel speaker in home audiophile, a professional studio mixing or mastering environment that isn't specifically used for checking mono compatibility, or for 5.1/7.1 mixing, and this is it. You may occasionally see a "center fill" or "stage fill" in a very large FOH system. This is only done for very large point source or line array systems where the angle of projection for the mains is such that it misses people right in front of the stage. It's a coverage issue, and a necessary compromise, not for TA/phase coherence.
The point here is that in the asymmetrical environment of vehicles, you can choose some level of a decent compromise of decent SQ for all listeners, with decent TA/phase alignment and a decent stereo field - OR - you can choose perfect TA/phase alignment for one listening position, and everyone else gets whatever is left over. On the extremes, if you want perfect TA/phase for all listeners, you'd make the listening environment perfectly symmetrical by putting all speaker(s) in the center. TA/phase could be perfect, but of course the stereo image would be non-existent. On the other extreme, you could delete the C channel entirely, TA one side of the vehicle to create perfect phase AND stereo image coherence for one side/position in the vehicle, at the cost of everyone else's SQ.
There is no right or wrong answer here. There's no perfect solution, it's just a matter of preference for individual use cases. In my scenario, I'll be the only one in my vehicle 95% of the time, and even if I do have passengers, 95% of the time we'll be blabbing about something rather than listening to music, and then even if we are listening to music, most of them won't care about SQ all that much anyway. For these reasons, it makes sense for me to have my system perfectly tuned to the driver's position, at the cost of SQ for non-existent and/or non-music-listening and/or non-caring passengers. If you have a partner who is super into music, or audiophile children, then you may want to choose the compromise option and lean more heavily on a C chan.
Or you can have kinda the best of both worlds (which is something I plan to do) by having multiple presets in your DSP. If you want to give the give of perfect SA to your passenger, load up "PASSENGER.preset"....if you've got a party in the car and you want everyone to have a decent listen, load up "COMPROMISE.preset".
Okay, I think I've beat this horse to death....
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