Hi Guys, Just dropped in to see this thread still going.
Lot of interesting ideas floating around, but the concept of "dispersion" mimicking instrument size, or cone size making an instrument sound larger is slightly off the mark.
Must be a visual thing. That is, we are comparing it to how we "see" things.
That is not how recorded stereo sound works at all.
Recorded sound is more like a three gun projector that has three beams that have to be perfectly converged to form a visual image. In the case of stereo, it is two "sonic projecting guns" that have to be converged to form a sonic image for the ear brain.
It the "projectors guns" are diffused and dispersed, the visual image is blurry and washed out. If they are clear and focused, they form a highly resolved and detailed image on the screen.
Wide dispersion from a speaker does not have anything to do with the way you hear it unless your ears are 3 feet wide on each side of your head.
Spreading the sound out 90 degrees, 180 degrees or 360 degrees, will not cause it to sound like the real instrument since your ears only sample TWO "very small" samples. And that image is formed by sampling 2 signals that combine to make the image.
The illusion or "confusion" is related to perceiving that we somehow hear recorded sound from stereo, as we do a live event.
We don't.
In real life, we have millions of sound sources coming in from any and all angles. In stereo, we have 2. Trying to make (disperse) the 2 into that million is not only futile, but impossible.
This is an attempt to "disassemble" the two signals, by sending them all over the place to somehow be reassembled at you ear.
Taking these two samples and trying to make them disperse into some sonic spray, and expecting that this spray will then gel into a soundstage, won't happen.
Now don't get me wrong, it can sound beautiful, but it really won't do what most are thinking.
The Bose 901s developed by Dr Amar Bose in the late 60s, tried to perform this by firing all that info into a reflective surface (wall) and using that dispersion and about 17-22% direct sound to give the mirage of a "sonic projection with direction".
Few use them any more.
Regarding Anechoic Chambers.
I have built and used many anechoic chambers, and was thinking at one time about building a small 7' x 7' x 6' chamber to sell to audiophiles who might find them fun to assemble and use in apartments or other applications where they wanted to listen at concert levels, without disturbing neighbors or whatever.
They could be placed in large closets, garages, basements, attics or where have you and the sound would be unbeleivable. Even modest equipment yeilded some very impressive, realistic, listening.
The sonic virtues of this type of listening has not been experienced by many, and I can only say the you can place yourself into a live recording far deeper than any other listening environment.
I have been there many times. I currently use a "modified" LEDE type room which also works well for most purposes.
Don't make the mistake of visiting JBL or some speaker company's chamber, (designed to measure speaker sound only) and think you know what anechoic listening really is.
But in any event, I just wanted to "sound off" on the dispersion issue. The point being that any dispersion any wider than your ear is not used in the ear/brain recreation, unless it has hit a surface and becomes a reflection, and then as someone else has stated it is a "distortion". A distortion is any thing other than the original signal that has be added to or subtracted from the original.
In the standard listening room we probably have a "very high" % of reflected sound/distortion. I mean it could be 40% or so. Imagine buying an amp that had 40% distortion!!
And as a final thought, many seem to read the scientific literature written by well respected Acoustic Engineers and researchers and "mis" interpret the info, and worse yet many well credentialed Acousticians,and experts do the same thing.
While physics and acoustics are "in stone" as to their properties and principles, their applications to venues and reproduction environment are "VERY" different.
The largest and main difference is that in a "performance venue" the space is designed or treated to "USE" the environment. Devices like diffusors and such "are" valuable to acheiving a good even covering of the original space.
In the "reproduction environment" that is not the case.
Anyone who confuses the two will never hear what is on the recording from the original venue.
Again, this is not a problem if you like the "sound shaping" you are doing. I certainly used to.....Until I heard about 90% of the real thing, and I haven't been the same since (OK no jokes)
I hope that all makes sense, and I also trust that those who are ecstatically happy with their sound do not take offense. It is just physics and acoustics, and beleive it or not, you're as much an expert as the next guy, cause you know what you like.
And that is what counts.
Lot of interesting ideas floating around, but the concept of "dispersion" mimicking instrument size, or cone size making an instrument sound larger is slightly off the mark.
Must be a visual thing. That is, we are comparing it to how we "see" things.
That is not how recorded stereo sound works at all.
Recorded sound is more like a three gun projector that has three beams that have to be perfectly converged to form a visual image. In the case of stereo, it is two "sonic projecting guns" that have to be converged to form a sonic image for the ear brain.
It the "projectors guns" are diffused and dispersed, the visual image is blurry and washed out. If they are clear and focused, they form a highly resolved and detailed image on the screen.
Wide dispersion from a speaker does not have anything to do with the way you hear it unless your ears are 3 feet wide on each side of your head.
Spreading the sound out 90 degrees, 180 degrees or 360 degrees, will not cause it to sound like the real instrument since your ears only sample TWO "very small" samples. And that image is formed by sampling 2 signals that combine to make the image.
The illusion or "confusion" is related to perceiving that we somehow hear recorded sound from stereo, as we do a live event.
We don't.
In real life, we have millions of sound sources coming in from any and all angles. In stereo, we have 2. Trying to make (disperse) the 2 into that million is not only futile, but impossible.
This is an attempt to "disassemble" the two signals, by sending them all over the place to somehow be reassembled at you ear.
Taking these two samples and trying to make them disperse into some sonic spray, and expecting that this spray will then gel into a soundstage, won't happen.
Now don't get me wrong, it can sound beautiful, but it really won't do what most are thinking.
The Bose 901s developed by Dr Amar Bose in the late 60s, tried to perform this by firing all that info into a reflective surface (wall) and using that dispersion and about 17-22% direct sound to give the mirage of a "sonic projection with direction".
Few use them any more.
Regarding Anechoic Chambers.
I have built and used many anechoic chambers, and was thinking at one time about building a small 7' x 7' x 6' chamber to sell to audiophiles who might find them fun to assemble and use in apartments or other applications where they wanted to listen at concert levels, without disturbing neighbors or whatever.
They could be placed in large closets, garages, basements, attics or where have you and the sound would be unbeleivable. Even modest equipment yeilded some very impressive, realistic, listening.
The sonic virtues of this type of listening has not been experienced by many, and I can only say the you can place yourself into a live recording far deeper than any other listening environment.
I have been there many times. I currently use a "modified" LEDE type room which also works well for most purposes.
Don't make the mistake of visiting JBL or some speaker company's chamber, (designed to measure speaker sound only) and think you know what anechoic listening really is.
But in any event, I just wanted to "sound off" on the dispersion issue. The point being that any dispersion any wider than your ear is not used in the ear/brain recreation, unless it has hit a surface and becomes a reflection, and then as someone else has stated it is a "distortion". A distortion is any thing other than the original signal that has be added to or subtracted from the original.
In the standard listening room we probably have a "very high" % of reflected sound/distortion. I mean it could be 40% or so. Imagine buying an amp that had 40% distortion!!
And as a final thought, many seem to read the scientific literature written by well respected Acoustic Engineers and researchers and "mis" interpret the info, and worse yet many well credentialed Acousticians,and experts do the same thing.
While physics and acoustics are "in stone" as to their properties and principles, their applications to venues and reproduction environment are "VERY" different.
The largest and main difference is that in a "performance venue" the space is designed or treated to "USE" the environment. Devices like diffusors and such "are" valuable to acheiving a good even covering of the original space.
In the "reproduction environment" that is not the case.
Anyone who confuses the two will never hear what is on the recording from the original venue.
Again, this is not a problem if you like the "sound shaping" you are doing. I certainly used to.....Until I heard about 90% of the real thing, and I haven't been the same since (OK no jokes)
I hope that all makes sense, and I also trust that those who are ecstatically happy with their sound do not take offense. It is just physics and acoustics, and beleive it or not, you're as much an expert as the next guy, cause you know what you like.
And that is what counts.