Mrtennis
right you are, yet there is a common theme, we are NOT that different after all. People 'start' get 'startled' and if for SOME reason this keeps going on in the wrong place (phase) and time (timing) it starts to make you edgy and uncomfortable rather than getting drawn into the music, yes?
Why, this would happen is really the question. My notion this far is a 'bad' dispersion pattern, in true Hi-End often the trade-off in favour of reduced insertion losses, or simply put a more 'basic' crossover design, and look no further then 1st order, with only one component per slope at its minimal 'best'. It will produce stacks of lobbing (call it comb-filtering at its best :-) and thereby produce an unpredictable, call it 'wonky' in-room response, call it amplitude distortion, right?
As with all things Audio, I agree, that's what some folks are looking for, to give you that extra 'kick', if it works for you. In my case, I'm more prone to get a freak-on if piano starts to sound like a cembalo, a violin, like a cello and a male singer like a woman or visa versa. I kind of overstate it somewhat to get this point across...
All this may not be the case at all, IF (say it again IF) you sit nicely in the sweet spot ---- where ever that is!? You can make it up then, as you move some this a way, or some that a way… have a cembalo here, make it a piano there, honky-tonk when you dare to stand up, etc.
Greetings,
Axel
right you are, yet there is a common theme, we are NOT that different after all. People 'start' get 'startled' and if for SOME reason this keeps going on in the wrong place (phase) and time (timing) it starts to make you edgy and uncomfortable rather than getting drawn into the music, yes?
Why, this would happen is really the question. My notion this far is a 'bad' dispersion pattern, in true Hi-End often the trade-off in favour of reduced insertion losses, or simply put a more 'basic' crossover design, and look no further then 1st order, with only one component per slope at its minimal 'best'. It will produce stacks of lobbing (call it comb-filtering at its best :-) and thereby produce an unpredictable, call it 'wonky' in-room response, call it amplitude distortion, right?
As with all things Audio, I agree, that's what some folks are looking for, to give you that extra 'kick', if it works for you. In my case, I'm more prone to get a freak-on if piano starts to sound like a cembalo, a violin, like a cello and a male singer like a woman or visa versa. I kind of overstate it somewhat to get this point across...
All this may not be the case at all, IF (say it again IF) you sit nicely in the sweet spot ---- where ever that is!? You can make it up then, as you move some this a way, or some that a way… have a cembalo here, make it a piano there, honky-tonk when you dare to stand up, etc.
Greetings,
Axel