Hi Amg
Yep, we may be different on this one, no biggie. I have always looked at any part of a system as a tool. Not making adjustments with music has never been a part of my thinking or reality.
Michael Green
www.michaelgreenaudio.net
What Matters and What is Nonsense
Hi Glupson you said "It is an interesting observation in complete opposition from mine. I am sure we all have different friends. I am talking only about real living people we know and may meet, not virtual Facebook and Internet personae. I know only one (repeat, one) person who has had any inclination to buy anything more than a Bluetooth speaker or some Bose Wave Radio variant." Yep, we come from two different realities. The friends I have always been around are musical friends with either studios or playback systems. I have never really ventured, or had time to venture, outside of entertainment. I would also say though that anyone who ever did become a friend of mine ended up having an in home setup. I've heard about HEA hobbyist that had no friends that were into it, but I've never experienced it so that's not a concept I can relate to very well. Michael Green www.michaelgreenaudio.net |
amg56 I actually disagree that the introduction of a component that "structurally" changed the system you have is a "tweak". The Urban Dictionary defines tweaks "Tweak- to touch something up, fiddle with the finishing touches or make tiny little changes". Additions of cables or regenerators or major room adjustments are not tweaks. These are major changes to the essence of the "HiFi" setup you have. Moving a speaker a degree toe in, or a small adjustment to the stylus etc are to me tweaks. To me, major physical changes aren’t tweaks. >>>>Not sure I go along with your detective work. Since when is The Urban Dictionary a reliable reference source for technical or audiophile jargon? The boundary line line between “major changes” and “tweaks” in this hobby has become rather blurred, you know, what with tiny little bowls, artificial atoms, fancy fuses, power cords that are controlled for directionality, vibration isolation, cryogenics, Graphene infused contact enhancers, and so on. When it comes to INFLUENCING THE SOUND it’s often unpredictable what sort of change to the system will produce the largest degree of change. A major component or physical change or some innocuous looking tweak. One should probably strive to keep an open mind these days. |
Here is an interesting 10 year old article on active room correction: https://www.stereophile.com/reference/108tech/index.html This is the kind of technology that can make a big difference in an audio system. I know that Meyer Sound is doing this for commercial spaces. Does anyone know of a firm working on similar technolgy for the home? If it isn’t out there yet, it eventually will be. (Dirac and similar systems employ static correction filters using the main audio system. I’m talking about a separate active room tailoring system using microphones, DSP and speakers). |