Ct0517, How do I do that? Thanks.
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- 245 posts total
ok lets have some more fun. I broke this up into two posts. Ptss, I try to answer your question from my experiences in the next post. Going to try to use youtube to illustrate something. In order for readers to participate here, you will need a computer with built in speakers and decent external headphones (not the kind that came with your phone) that can be plugged into the computer as well. With the holidays approaching, lets say you are shopping at a big mall. You are walking through and hear music playing. You approach it gets louder. A nice retail Audio storefront. A dying breed ? You stand in the doorway and listen to the music that is playing. Click on the following youtube link. No affiliation to the video. 1) Please first listen to it through your built in computer speakers. No external headphones https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiVL36Fp7i0 The reason I did this is because I have been to dealer showrooms where the music sounded just like that youtube. Speakers sound bright. There just happens to be a large tonal imbalance with my Lenovo laptop's built in speakers. They don't do bass well. If this is what you hear in your actual room with your home speakers it could mean a number of things including too much room volume for the speakers, amplifiers that don't have the balls to deliver on the B&W bass requirements going down to 3 ohms. The fixes should all include trying to establish good tonal balance between highs, medium, lows. When it's there you will know. This can include moving the speakers closer to the front wall for bass reinforcement. But this will also collapse the soundstage depth, and will interfere with the soundstage definition. Another option is adding subwoofer/s. But this also gets more complicated. Its another discussion. Another option is to bring in more power. B&W always respond with better bass with more power. If tube amps, make sure the transformers are good quality and my experience has been the 4 ohms tap produces the best bass. With SS Class A and A/b amplifiers make sure the wattage specs double down. Some like McIntosh another type of SS design with autoformers. They will all sound different. 2) Now please listen to the same link but this time with your "external headphones plugged" into your computer. I have a pair of Denon and Grados. The sound with my headphones becomes more balanced. The music now has meat on the bones. Do you hear it ? Comments.... |
Ptss - Ct0517, How do I do that? This new audiogon format does not allow me to link specific audiogon posts only pages. See the first post on this page for more info. The relevant text is shown below. https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/eminent-technology-et-2-tonearm-owners?page=31 I don't usually re-read my posts. I think I might be a little worried about what I might have actually said. Sometimes the morning coffee goes to your head. There was some discussion around amplifiers. which came around to remembering that the Speaker is the Alpha over the Amplifier and that the Room is the Alpha over the Speaker. In regards to how one chooses the type/design of Speaker first and then narrowing it down. taken from that previous page post. IMO, IME There are a few rules (guidelines) in audio. The rules that revolve around the speakers themselves, have a big effect on the amplifier design. Well you can only have two of the three above. If someone doesn't believe it; run through the math and the scenarios of the 3 options. The previous youtube example with the 804 and 805 demonstrate speakers that try to accomplish points 1 and 3. So lets say with the above approach a person identifies 3 speaker candidates. I would if I was spending a small fortune on these speakers. 1) First call the speaker manufacturer direct (not the dealer) and get details. No one knows more about the speakers than the designer/manufacturer. If step one passes **** 2) Arrange to demo them in your own space. if this is not possible, 3) Demo them in the dealer space with your amp and music. Consider how close their room is to yours. 4) If you can't demo what you buy will be based on point one + friends, and other recommendations. **** If the manufacturer representative will not give you the time of day and sends you to a dealer. Move to the next speaker. Tell the manufacturer about your room volume, listening habits, and how YOU would like to have the speakers positioned - ideally. Find out how the speakers were designed. Ask him. Does he listen to Bach or AC/DC in his dedicated room, or his living room (maybe he is a boutique maker ?) What amps is he using? There will always be 3 or 4 amps any speaker maker has at his shop. This is too much of a niche business for a manufacturer to build a speaker that only works with one amplifier type. If the amplifiers he mentions represent different designs, then you have found a speaker design that will probably work with different amps. Make sure you find out the different brands and model and if they are both tube and SS designs. If the speaker is rated 50 - 200 watts ask him how much the presentation will change with your preferred room setup with 25, 50 and 200 and 400 watts. (Both SS and Tube) If discussions go well, go to the dealer to hear the new speakers; or start searching for used speakers like this. If he gives you the B&W story (voiced in an anechoic chamber) you know you will have your work cut out for you. Are you sure you really want this speaker? You can see what kind of room treatment is used in that youtube video. And the sound in that video may be too revealing still for some people. Further damping needed on the highs. And also sometimes you need to read between the lines with speaker reviews as well. Here is a clear warning to an Audiophile. ************************************************ "Higher in frequency, the response trend (averaged across a 30 degrees lateral window on the tweeter axis) is basically flat, but with a slight excess of energy in the presence region and a corresponding lack of energy in the top octave. All things being equal, this will make the speaker both a little too revealing of recorded detail and somewhat fussy when it comes to the quality of source and amplification components." ************************************************ These words tell me this Speaker's studio role comes first. To let the master engineer hear everything so he can do his/her job. It is not this speaker's design/job to present nice warm musical music with every piece of music you own. The Audiophile purchasing the speaker described here will be dealing with a level of resolution, that every micro level - wire change will make a difference. Is this what you really what ? Or do you want to just lay back in your chair and listen to music. This quote btw is from the Stereophile review of the 801 Matrix. Now the funny thing is some will read that and actually say to themselves; "that sounds really cool" and be attracted to it. In the end you will drive yourself batty because what really counts most here is is the quality of the original recording file that is sent to the mastering studios. Good recordings sound great, bad ones sound bad. Some speakers (not the 800 series) are able to make even bad recordings sound tolerable. |
information Monitor Audio Platinum series II: http://www.cepro.com/article/monitor_revamps_with_platinum_series_ii |
- 245 posts total