kanewolf..fyi the front and rear have same rated impedance 3 ohms, 1khz ..from manual book
1)power output(rated) front L/front R :75W +75W (at 3ohms,1khz,1% THD)
2)power output(reference): front L/ front R/ surround L/ surround R: 125W(perchannel at 3ohm,1khz)
Those statements don't change my basic position. Your sound experience will be negatively impacted because when sound engineers mix multi-channel audio more of the sound is sent to the left, center and right speaker channels than is sent to the surround channel. Sony, spent time and money optimizing the speakers they sold for each of the channels.
You can move the speakers around and try it. You won't hurt anything. But my guess is you will put it back.
kanewolf..fyi the front and rear have same rated impedance 3 ohms, 1khz ..from manual book
1)power output(rated) front L/front R :75W +75W (at 3ohms,1khz,1% THD)
2)power output(reference): front L/ front R/ surround L/ surround R: 125W(perchannel at 3ohm,1khz)
kanewolf..fyi the front and rear have same rated impedance 3 ohms, 1khz ..from manual book
1)power output(rated) front L/front R :75W +75W (at 3ohms,1khz,1% THD)
2)power output(reference): front L/ front R/ surround L/ surround R: 125W(perchannel at 3ohm,1khz)
Those statements don't change my basic position. Your sound experience will be negatively impacted because when sound engineers mix multi-channel audio more of the sound is sent to the left, center and right speaker channels than is sent to the surround channel. Sony, spent time and money optimizing the speakers they sold for each of the channels.
You can move the speakers around and try it. You won't hurt anything. But my guess is you will put it back.