Appeal to Authority Alert! Whoa! That’s two in one day! What are the odds? 🎲 🎲
Test Equipment vs The Ear
Just posted this link in another thread,
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Sound/earsens.html
Could the ear actually be superior to test equipment?
What do you think?
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Sound/earsens.html
Could the ear actually be superior to test equipment?
What do you think?
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- 33 posts total
@shadorne - if you are referring to... https://www.soundstagenetwork.com/measurements/test_loudspeakers.htm I do not believe any of those tests indicates the ability of a speaker to respond to a very dynamic transient signal - such as a drum strike. They would need to record the transient response i.e. the slew rate and rise time of such transients It is something the ear can discern very easily and something you can see on an oscilloscope, but to my knowledge (which has its limitations) I do not know of any such measurement reported specifically for speakers at present. From Wikipedia... Transient response As for the tests above - I do appreciate the value of such tests if a person does not have resources (i.e. good audio stores) for audition purposes - Personally, I have been fortunate in the past to have access to some very good stores that allowed me to audition their very high end products. which has helped me in choosing the components i now own. .. Mostly, I value the opinions of forum members - but ultimately I trust my ears. Cheers |
@williewonka Yes. This non linearlity as measured by Soundstage affects dynamic range directly. Acting as a limiter or compressor to the louder sounds. The Speaker will sound dull boomy and congested - nearly all speakers do at louder levels - Soundstage readily admits that the majority of speakers have problems with this test. Group delay is important - especially in bass where many resonant designs have excessive audible group delay in order to deliver more bass output - however this is not so much a dynamic range effect but a smearing that does muddy the sound. I n speakers I think transient performance is more related to driver integration, flat frequency response and a lack of coloration or "ringing" from the driver - as a percussion strike has many frequencies that all need to be delivered seamlessly and correctly placed in time. A good test is the waterfall plot - a nice clean waterfall will present transients well and without adding coloration. Electrostatic panels like Quad present transients very well. |
Appeal to Authority Alert!Serious listeners are far better listen to them, than listening to witch doctors, or snake oil peddlers. https://ibb.co/bwyCRG Cheers George |
- 33 posts total