What makes the biggest difference in sound quality?


When making changes or adding things to your system, what makes the bigger difference in sound quality on preamp‘s and power amps? Interconnects, speaker cables, power cords, or fuses?

128x128ted_denney

The most difficult to find component that is affordable is the power amplifier IMHO!

 

Rest in Peace John Bedini... and Gary...!

I don’t believe using a full loom of cables from just one manufacturer makes sense

Of course if you don’t actually have a full loom of cables from one manufacturer and by full loom I mean, all interconnects, digital and analog, all power cords even if they’re going to a turntable motor, and all speaker cables from the same manufacturer and generation/loom, unless someone has actually done this experiment and let the loom settle in for one week, then you really can’t know what a full loom will sound like. And while power cords may make the biggest first impression, it is usually the last cable you replace, something like a mis-matched ethernet cable, an interconnect or a power cord going to something you don’t think matters, it is almost always the last cable that is perceived as making the single biggest difference when that cable completes the loom. Absent this actual experiment taking place, the best bet is to mix and match with cable stew but this will never sound as coherent as a proper loom in the system. At least this has been my experience, and this is also what I find to be the biggest downfall systems costing six figures but with Cable Stew. In fact I’ve heard well set up systems $20,000-$30,000 with a full loom of cables, a full loom of electronics, proper speaker placement and mild acoustic treatments, outperform systems in the deep six-figure range with mis matched cables and components.

Yours in music,

Ted Denney III

Lead Designer/CEO Synergistic Research Inc.

grannyring's avatar

grannyring

5,893 posts

#1 - the recording quality 

#2 - my mood and how tired I am 

#3 - proper speaker placement in room

Wild applause!

Recording quality is the number one ingredient to beautiful recordings/playback. The performance, the instrument, the recording room, the recording technique, the microphones, preamps, and the mix. All of these things are so so so crucial, and many famous recordings aren't even close to being as nice as your speakers are! (Even when engineers use the latest and greatest technology, they are rarely recording in a way that makes sense to our ears/brain.)

And after a great recording is done, your room can dramatically change the perceived sound of your speakers. I was mastering solo piano recordings in a new, purpose-built studio control room. Acoustically pure, dedicated HVAC system, electrically and mechanically isolated, with in-wall ATC speakers. Sounded fantastic, but if you left the door to the control room cracked open, you could hear a distinct [negative] difference in the sound. Had to be shut to have the right dimensions and reflections!

What am I getting at?

  • recording quality is king! and a good mix will sound great on your towers or your iPhone
  • your room shape, couch, or bookshelf position may have more impact than your cables
  • enjoy the music, and let's build bridges between the audiophile (playback) community and the recording (tracking) community.

PS. This same discussion comes up all the time in the recording world: "What makes the most difference in the recording chain? What is the most important piece of recording gear? What should I spend my money on?" 

@norsehorse 

There are days when I listen to music and something sounds off.  I immediately panic thinking maybe I blew a tube or something.  Then I go to a different recording and I say ok back to normal.  So I get where your comments come from and I agree.

There are so many comments on room acoustics.  My room sucks but there is nothing major that I can do about it.  My guess is that most audiophiles suffer from the same dilemma.  So we use every tweak imaginable to help...HFT's, Townshend Podiums, Fuses, 1260 enhancer, fuses, magnets, stones etc.  All of these tweaks would not be necessary if our rooms were acoustical sound.  I wish I could improve the acoustics in my two-channel room but it is also my great room/kitchen.   You make do with what you have and just enjoy the music.