Phase cancellation occurs when two sound waves intersect at a single point. This can happen in a large room or an intimate one. A good trick to avoid this acoustic phenomenom is to take the stereo outs from your source - use two separate channels, and EQ them differntly, so the sound wave produced by each signal is slightly different. For example:
Thate the mids DOWN onone channel, and boost the mids UP on the other channel.
This is an old studio trick (in reverse) that used to simulate a stereo feed from a mono source. Try to find that one "swet spot" that works for your particular sound, and the cancellation just may disapear.
My feeling is that a truly high quality sound NEEDS to sound good in mono as well as stereo. The rooms are too different to expect that only one setting will cover all bases. Mono is a neccessity sometimes.
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