Speaker Burn In...


Hi Folks,

What methods work well with Dynaudio Focus 110 speakers to burn them in? I've heard it's a long process, so I want to do it right!

Thanks....Brian.
trumpetbri
I have found that speakers do not so much require 'burn in' as 'break in'.

I believe it's a matter of the actual mechanism requiring a bit of 'loosening up' for the speakers to sound optimal.

There is no doubt in my mind whatsoever that this holds true; I once purchase a pair of NHT 1.3's, but they didn't have them in stock. I borrowed the demos until mine came in on order. When I got my NIB speakers home, they did not sound anywhere NEAR as good as the demo pair i had been using. They sounded flat, uninvolving, totally lacking in bass, undynamic...

Day and night, i tell ya. I simply played my new speakers at moderate volumes as often as i could to get them to loosen up. I am in total disagreement with anyone stating that speaker break-in is pyschosomatic.

Just play music - and lots of it! your speakers will break in eventually and you can enjoy/observe the changes in the process along the way.
Many years ago I sent my MG1 panels to White Bear lake for a rebuild. When they came back they were a little stiff in the sense that they had less power handling and needed a little more juice to get going. That fixed itself in a couple months of casual use.

When I replace the MG1s with 1.6s, I started with zero time speakers. These quite different to break in. The image wandered back and forth for several hours. Frequency response changed, too.
All that was over within a few hours and they have remained stable ever since.
Loose,I think most people take burn in and break to mean the same thing.I could be wrong,have been before!!!!