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Not sure how to ask this question. Dynamic Range what do we want or actually mean?If you have ever listened to a drum recording by Kodo which has a wide dynamic range. It starts out quiet, so you adjust the volume so that you can hear it. If you leave the volume there, once they get going the dynamic range increases to the point it'll blast you out of your chair even blow you speakers.So as audiophiles we want dynamic range not some squashed compressed recording. But is there a limit or a technique to how it's presented so that it doesn't wreck your hearing or speakers?
.... But is there a limit or a technique to how it's presented so that it doesn't wreck your hearing or speakers?
Re: that particular recording (which I have), I'd say you are turning up the quiet parts too much if the loud parts are possibly causing speaker damage. It might be because your system isn't passing low level information very clearly, or you need a quieter room, or you might have hearing damage or loss that causes you go have to turn up the quiet parts more. The first thing I would look at is the room, and any sources of ambient noise (street noise, A/C hum, bleed through from walls, etc...).
I think part of why DSD sounds better than redbook is there's an inherent 6db greater amount of headroom with the way it's reordered/stored. You can hear this if you have 2 copies of an album, one in redbook and one in DSD - you'll notice the DSD one is about 6db quieter and you have to turn it up.
DO you live with others? Do you live in a condo or apartment with shared walls?If so, you do not want 'wide dynamic range'. You want some compression. and most recordings have some compression. Win Win.
Home Insurance is like $1600 which is way to high
What recording is that?