Speaker Setup Problem

Solution
You can download the owners manual from here
http://www.sherwoodusa.com/product/view.asp
What the problem is would help.
Usually there is a center speaker above or below the TV and two speakers flanking the TV and spread out a bit if possible, These are the front three speakers (LCR). The subwoofer can be placed where it's convenient but the sound will vary. Usually closer to the TV than to you is best. If the sub is in the corner it will play louder but not as flat. In a 5.1 there are two surround speakers usually behind you.
Most systems don't have large speakers capable of full range bass so usually all the speakers are set to small.
The receiver can be set to put out pink noise into each speaker. You set the level of each speaker...
You can download the owners manual from here
http://www.sherwoodusa.com/product/view.asp
What the problem is would help.
Usually there is a center speaker above or below the TV and two speakers flanking the TV and spread out a bit if possible, These are the front three speakers (LCR). The subwoofer can be placed where it's convenient but the sound will vary. Usually closer to the TV than to you is best. If the sub is in the corner it will play louder but not as flat. In a 5.1 there are two surround speakers usually behind you.
Most systems don't have large speakers capable of full range bass so usually all the speakers are set to small.
The receiver can be set to put out pink noise into each speaker. You set the level of each speaker so it sounds the same volume as all the others from your listening position. This sets the system to duplicate the sound the engineer mixed into the movie. The subwoofer level you set by listening to different sources and adjusting to your taste.
 
Solution