I think sounding accurate and being accurate are 2 different things. The speaker is either accurate or it's not. If the room is messed up, changing the speaker is not going to help. Treating the room is the only option.
If a speaker comes off the technical development path and its basic characteristics are flawed, it will never get that back. It may "Sound" good to some but sounding good and accurate are 2 different things.
It has been my experience over the years that most "Audiophiles" will not like an accurate speaker. We have all been exposed to inaccurate reproduction and developed what is probably a skewed look at things. We are looking for what "Sounds" good to us and not what is correct. I think we can blame a lot on poor sources. The CD for the most part stinks. Sure, they are a few good sounding disks around but most are pretty bad. A lot of the old remastered CD's to SACD sound even worse on that format. It exposes their flaws and I think accurate speakers do this also. Nobody wants 3/4 of their collection sounding bad. So we tune it to "Sound" good most of the time. Nothing wrong with that but if you just accept the fact, you can sure buy great audio for a lot less money.
I just think a lot of us, including myself are chasing our tails on a never ending quest that will never be fulfilled.
2 channel audio is slowly dying away being replaced by multi channel which IMO is even a bigger pile of crap. Here, inaccurancies are the rule of the day and I'm not sure I would want a "Accurate" home theater. I want a home theater that sounds good! Stark contrast to 2 channel.
In conclusion, people are going to buy what sounds good to them no matter what the technical specifications. There will always be the dissenting few that demand accuracy, quality and value for their dollar. But just look at what most of the population buys. Can I say Best Buy!
It is a real shame that audio is going the direction it is. More and more pricey equipment and more and more of the same with the same arguments.
When you have no real standards, things get pretty chaotic.
I think, "If it makes you happy, then you have done good!"
Get off the trail and buy more music. That's what it is all about---right?
If a speaker comes off the technical development path and its basic characteristics are flawed, it will never get that back. It may "Sound" good to some but sounding good and accurate are 2 different things.
It has been my experience over the years that most "Audiophiles" will not like an accurate speaker. We have all been exposed to inaccurate reproduction and developed what is probably a skewed look at things. We are looking for what "Sounds" good to us and not what is correct. I think we can blame a lot on poor sources. The CD for the most part stinks. Sure, they are a few good sounding disks around but most are pretty bad. A lot of the old remastered CD's to SACD sound even worse on that format. It exposes their flaws and I think accurate speakers do this also. Nobody wants 3/4 of their collection sounding bad. So we tune it to "Sound" good most of the time. Nothing wrong with that but if you just accept the fact, you can sure buy great audio for a lot less money.
I just think a lot of us, including myself are chasing our tails on a never ending quest that will never be fulfilled.
2 channel audio is slowly dying away being replaced by multi channel which IMO is even a bigger pile of crap. Here, inaccurancies are the rule of the day and I'm not sure I would want a "Accurate" home theater. I want a home theater that sounds good! Stark contrast to 2 channel.
In conclusion, people are going to buy what sounds good to them no matter what the technical specifications. There will always be the dissenting few that demand accuracy, quality and value for their dollar. But just look at what most of the population buys. Can I say Best Buy!
It is a real shame that audio is going the direction it is. More and more pricey equipment and more and more of the same with the same arguments.
When you have no real standards, things get pretty chaotic.
I think, "If it makes you happy, then you have done good!"
Get off the trail and buy more music. That's what it is all about---right?