Speaker Pricing and Reviews
Hi Everyone,
I just posted two entries to my blog that I think you'll find interesting and hopefully informative. I've been doing a lot of analysis and trying to compare my personal hearing experiences with reviews, especially at Stereophile which has caused me to post a couple of pieces online. Please let me know what you think. One of the common replies is that there is more than frequency response to speakers, which is true, but then why do so many of the over-hyped speakers Stereophile reviews share a common frequency response (FR) curve?
The more I go back in time looking at Stereophile FR charts, the more apparent the Stereophile curve becomes.
Please let me know what you think.
Best,
Erik
I just posted two entries to my blog that I think you'll find interesting and hopefully informative. I've been doing a lot of analysis and trying to compare my personal hearing experiences with reviews, especially at Stereophile which has caused me to post a couple of pieces online. Please let me know what you think. One of the common replies is that there is more than frequency response to speakers, which is true, but then why do so many of the over-hyped speakers Stereophile reviews share a common frequency response (FR) curve?
The more I go back in time looking at Stereophile FR charts, the more apparent the Stereophile curve becomes.
Please let me know what you think.
Best,
Erik
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- 11 posts total
No, not at all, but it's a lot cheaper to buy a nanoDIGI to alter the FR for $170to match your hearing loss than to buy a speaker for tens of thousands of dollars. :) It's also not nearly neutral, so don't sell it to me as such. Best, Erik |
gdhal, What I don't believe is that a speaker as non-neutral as the B&W 802's or Golden Ears are being touted as the best available. As other critics have written, my ears hurt from listening to treble boosted that much. So, either the speakers are making the reviewers feel like they have the ears of a teenager, or something else is going on. I also don't believe the Golden Ear curve just happens to match perfectly with the B&W curves. It's not possible with such completely different technologies. I'm not the most knowledgable speaker maker out there, but you'd have a tough time convincing me this was all coincidental. So, I don't have proof, but I also don't think they are being objective. At best, what I would say is that if B&W managed to convince so many that their speakers were a neutral reference (objectively, they are not) then maybe they set the standard that is being measured by. They set the fashion if you will, and reviewers, knowingly or not, are basing their tastes on that. Best, Erik |
- 11 posts total