Unbelievable


Yamaha really made this statement:

Glossy black piano finish provides improved signal-to-noise performance


https://europe.yamaha.com/en/products/audio_visual/speaker_systems/ns-5000/index.html

 

I thought I would seek opportunity to hear these speakers, but now I do not think so

 

 

 

 

 


sashav
If Sony says it I would tend to believe it’s probably true. Both my Sony MDR-V700 headphones and Sony WM D3 portable cassette player are extremely revealing. I suspect I could distinguish pure water from Mississippi river water instantly, no problem.

Maybe if you candled 🕯 your ears you could hear it too.
Why? Was Goethe an audiophile? I hate to brag but chances are good that I know more about color and sound than was dreamed of in Goethe’s lifetime.
Dont be offended so easily.... My post had nothing to do with you ….And Citation from a past genius dont remove anything from any actual one....And there is more about colors than the facts you brag about.... :)


Some Goethean clue: colors are "lived" phenomena.... Not measured facts only.....Same thing for sounds....
Whoa, I haven’t told you what the facts I know are about colors and you attack me anyway? If you didn’t invent it, it doesn’t exist.
I dont attack you.... I defend Goethe …. And I welcome any new facts....I will listen to you with pleasure and curiosity like always....And dont pretend that you dont know it....
@tatyana:'Some years ago I read a number of articles that different varnishes can affect sound, so maybe not too far fetched' 
I understand that both the wood grain and the lacquers on a Stradivarius or Guarneri violin are a significant part of the sound, understandable when the whole body resonates with the strings. For a speaker, with inert cabinets (at least by intent) not so much!