There are other (non-audiophile) ways.Even if it's a custom room supposedly built with a specific speaker in mind, the only way I know to achieve a superior interaction aka an acoustic coupling is speaker placement regardless of room type or quality.
1. The room is the most important component.
7. Aftermarket acoustic treatments are a requirement for superior sonics.
14. There is usually a direct correlation between cost and performance and/or one must spend a lot to achieve a truly musical SOTA level of playback performance.
Ok, my opinion about the room…
I will try two miths at the same time !opcorn:
Here we are getting in war zone, or at least in shifting sands with these.![]()
First the need of acoustic treatment. IF you have a dedicated room to audio stuff, naked of furniture, where there is only the system and your chair, I would say, OF COURSE, some room treatment will be need. BUT, if you have a normal living room, with some standard furniture, probably with a sofa, curtains in the windows, a good carpet, and IF there is no echo (clap test), you don't need any acoustic treatment. Voilá! :sigh: All the problems that you ear are in the system. (*)
I don´t even think the position of the speakers are so critical than you. At some point is more a matter of taste. When things are right at the "back" of the system, as we all know, different position brings a different sound. As an example, more toe-in gives more focus and speed, less toe-in more stage and less defined bass. But somehow you feel that in a way or another things are "right" and you have to decide what you like more.
BUT, as it seems to me that there are very few truly fine-tuned systems that have reached high levels of performance, and especially when these are expensive with pedigreed brands, the tendency is to blame the room. That´s why, in my opinion, the importance of the room is overrated.
I leave this exercise again: imagine a room normally furnished as described above, but where it is difficult to take pleasure in an audio system. We take out the audio system and put in a piano or a bass guitar. Is it going to sound so bad that we're immediately looking for acoustic treatment?
(* I don´t have problems with my room. And my system reacts to all changes.
Let´s try another… quickly
No. We must spend a lot of TIME and passion to achieve a great playback performance.
BUT, when I listened some high priced gear, most of times I hear great potential but most of the time untapped. When I hear a big and strong bass, most of the times it intrudes through the other ranges and dominates and pollutes the whole presentation. When I hear a detailed presentation, most of times it is almost always anemic, “digital”, dry and lacking in groove. In many high priced systems, especially when speakers have exotic drivers, the human voice often sounds electronic and unpleasant. Most of times, the high frequencies are the “Achilles heel”, but I think in that case the problem is often outside the active components.
To conclude and trying to explain better, large systems, namely large speakers, “amplify” everything, even the problems:weird:, and often this result in lower performance. I like and pursue the effortless scale, dimension (*) and presentation that many speakers achieve but the problem is balance. I feel that many brands are trying to solve these problems, inside the equipment or even outside of them (**). In short, money alone does not guarantee a good performance.
(*) even bigger than natural because just like in the cinema I don't worry about a 2 meters face, I also don't dislike the instrument being reproduced beyond its natural size...
(**)McIntosh AS125 and AS901 amplifier stands Launches as dedicated stands for its highest amplifiers - YouTube
There are other (non-audiophile) ways.
cheers,
AJ
No shortcut. Have the speaker(s), in the same exact placement, vary its directivity full bandwidth. So that in the bass, the room modes, subsequent excitement and decay lengths, are driven differently and thus perceived differently at the listening position. Direct away from "too close" boundaries if needed. Ditto for the midbass through treble, so that boundary proximities don't degrade, but rather enhance the clarity, imaging and soundstaging characteristics. Without moving a mm.Who wouldn't be interested in other ways, epsecilally if they offer shortcuts? Do tell.![]()
Klingon Class A ...!!!
No shortcut. Have the speaker(s), in the same exact placement, vary its directivity full bandwidth. So that in the bass, the room modes, subsequent excitement and decay lengths, are driven differently and thus perceived differently at the listening position. Direct away from "too close" boundaries if needed. Ditto for the midbass through treble, so that boundary proximities don't degrade, but rather enhance the clarity, imaging and soundstaging characteristics. Without moving a mm.
Spatial rendering can vary quite a bit based on program material/recording techniques. The rendering requirements of a solo guitar recorded in studio is vastly different than a full orchestra in a hall. Its a fools errand to attempt both with direct plane waves radiation from 2 channels and expect similar results. That's been known for about 70 years, dating back to Bell Labs. Yet here we are.
cheers,
AJ
…In my limited experience, speaker/sub placement and/or tuning is the only way to achieve a truly musical bass as well as provide an overall balanced and musical presentation.
No but without careful speaker placement, I’ll bet dollars-to-donuts you have speaker / room interaction deficiencies.![]()
I actually consider this more distortion, etc as a cry for help elsewhere in the system.
11. Our ability to sufficiently discern / interpret what we hear was inherited at birth and/or We can sufficiently discern / interpret what we hear because we passed a hearing test last year.
Not the only way.From my experience, cables and accessories have a big role to play. My new speaker cables brought me the last improvement in the bass.
N Vasilic on Vimeo
But we'll get soon to the accessories...irate:
You are probably right because i don't sacrifice everything in the living room for the sound. I see some of my audiophile friends (at least two of them) who have the speakers almost in the center of the room. And this kill the space for other uses. In a house, the space (m2) is too expensive to waste!
Exactly. That´s what I mean when I say that “Most of times, the high frequencies are the “Achilles heel”, but I think in that case the problem is often outside the active components.”
We can't exploit the best of the high frequencies until we act on electricity...
Ok, let´s go now to another...
Here it is pure minefield.:reallymad:
No audiophile admits 2 things:
- that he made a wrong purchase (what he has is always the best the market has to offer)
- that he doesn't know how to listen
BUT the hearing can be trained!
And it is obvious that many audiophiles lack listening training. It's amazing how, for example, certain colorations are not perceived and, on the contrary, they are even praised as a “good sound”. Like when the bass is fat and boomy, and some people like it! Of course, many are not true practicing audiophiles. For them, listening to music is an accessory activity to reading the newspaper or something else. And of course quality is sacrificed in the altar of convenience.
Anytime i have the opportunity to listen another system, i look for what my system doesn´t have.
I think the best way to evolve is listening other systems and look for what´s good about them.
This, which I previously quoted:Regarding the first part I'm unsure what you're alluding to unless it's some type of dsp or EQ.
No hinting, just the facts of other way, stated in my response.Even if it's a custom room supposedly built with a specific speaker in mind, the only way I know to achieve a superior interaction aka an acoustic coupling is speaker placement regardless of room type or quality.
2. Accessories are well, errrr, ummmmm accessories.
Well, i go now for my last one, because in many of the others I have no opinion.
This one is, perhaps, the most dangerous of all.:heart:
Going straight to the point, just making it clear that:
- in the accessories theme I include the cables.
- what I will say next is on the assumption of the full optimization of a system to obtain the best possible performance.
So, in my opinion, at least 50% of the sound is played outside the active components. (*)
I know that there are many systems that don't show big differences, namely in cables. I do not know why. I leave the explanation of compatibilities in terms of impedances, etc. to others. But I trust much more in a system that reveals differences. Transparency levels are typically much higher, and the performance potential is much bigger. Systems that do not reveal differences play what they play and no more.
(*) One of Greek audiophiles in the video below says that electricity is 50% of a quality sound. I'm more reasonable.I give 50% to everything that is not an active component, with a large share for cables.
Clube de audiofilos de Atenas, ano 2006 - YouTube
Finally, I leave you with another myth: If the system seems to have different performances on different days, that it's only in our heads. We are the ones who make a different assessment because the system is always the same. Is that true?
Close cousins, perhaps...I'm beginning to think that Stehno and Spock are twins.