Unbelievable


Yamaha really made this statement:

Glossy black piano finish provides improved signal-to-noise performance


https://europe.yamaha.com/en/products/audio_visual/speaker_systems/ns-5000/index.html

 

I thought I would seek opportunity to hear these speakers, but now I do not think so

 

 

 

 

 


sashav
Why? Was Goethe an audiophile? I hate to brag but chances are good that I know more about color and sound than was dreamed of in Goethe’s lifetime.
Dont be offended so easily.... My post had nothing to do with you ….And Citation from a past genius dont remove anything from any actual one....And there is more about colors than the facts you brag about.... :)


Some Goethean clue: colors are "lived" phenomena.... Not measured facts only.....Same thing for sounds....
Whoa, I haven’t told you what the facts I know are about colors and you attack me anyway? If you didn’t invent it, it doesn’t exist.
I dont attack you.... I defend Goethe …. And I welcome any new facts....I will listen to you with pleasure and curiosity like always....And dont pretend that you dont know it....
@tatyana:'Some years ago I read a number of articles that different varnishes can affect sound, so maybe not too far fetched' 
I understand that both the wood grain and the lacquers on a Stradivarius or Guarneri violin are a significant part of the sound, understandable when the whole body resonates with the strings. For a speaker, with inert cabinets (at least by intent) not so much!
This just in! Fifth state of matter created on Space Station! Of course, the obvious question, at least for your humble narrator, is what can it do for audiophiles? Answer at 11.

"This actually is something I've been trying to do for about 23 years now," Robert Thompson, from the California Institute of Technology, told Newsweek in an email.


https://apple.news/AXioUGvq6SfW3OVwCnrH8zw