The radiated sound from the rear of the speaker will bounce off the rear wall and reach your ears after the sound from the front of the speaker. If the time lag between front and rear radiations is short (because the speaker is near the rear wall), you will "hear" (process) the sound as smeared. If the speaker is optimally 5.5 feet from the rear wall (or slightly further away) you will hear the difference as room or hall ambience, a pleasing complex of sounds.
Quad 2805 reliablity? Distance from wall needed?
I've heard Quads and enjoyed them but I keep
reading about their reliability problems in both
private and public postings (even in reviews).
I hear about blown panels, etc.
So what't the real story (primarily with the current 2805)?
(I used to have Apogees long ago that proved to be a nightmare with one ribbon woofer that could not be repaired after 3 trips back to their repair facility at the time. A shame because I loved the tonality and
fatigue-free listening.)
And one more question about the 2805s, I keep reading that they need to be far from the wall behind them. My Apogees were fine 2-feet from the wall, so can Quads perform without any fatal flaws at this distance?
Thanks in advance for anyone who cares to answer.
reading about their reliability problems in both
private and public postings (even in reviews).
I hear about blown panels, etc.
So what't the real story (primarily with the current 2805)?
(I used to have Apogees long ago that proved to be a nightmare with one ribbon woofer that could not be repaired after 3 trips back to their repair facility at the time. A shame because I loved the tonality and
fatigue-free listening.)
And one more question about the 2805s, I keep reading that they need to be far from the wall behind them. My Apogees were fine 2-feet from the wall, so can Quads perform without any fatal flaws at this distance?
Thanks in advance for anyone who cares to answer.
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- 8 posts total
- 8 posts total