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The original question, was "What speaker Types image most realistically".While many "do the deed" in different ways, my suggestion was that by attempting to reproduce the "recorded ambient detail" and limiting the detracticting sonic "overlay" of the listening room, you would acheive a greater degree of realism. ...
Which kind of eliminates dipoles, bipoles, omnidirectional designs...Panel speakers are bad because you get time smear from the large sound source. I feel the same is true of line source speakers (ribbons and such).I was fortunate enough to live for a number of years in a rural area, where I was able to take my stereo outdoors during the summer. It was very interesting to hear different speaker systems without any room effects at all. Perhaps the worst of the bunch was a pair of Magnepans.
What's weird to me is that the RM40s are recommended to be crossed over in front of a person. One would think that the ideal situation would be to beam the right speaker into a person's right ear and the left speaker in a person's left ear. If the waves cross in front of the listener, I would think that this would be bad, but my own tests suggest this is good and not bad. I'm not sure why.
Quote from: ctviggenWhat's weird to me is that the RM40s are recommended to be crossed over in front of a person. One would think that the ideal situation would be to beam the right speaker into a person's right ear and the left speaker in a person's left ear. If the waves cross in front of the listener, I would think that this would be bad, but my own tests suggest this is good and not bad. I'm not sure why.Very good question, John, care to take a crack at it ?
Quote from: John CaslerActually I don't think that headphones would offer the idea, since they don't present sound to the "pinna" in a way that will allow it to provide the directional and localizational information to form a soundstage and imaging....That's why they were using those "heads" to do binaural recording. The shape of the head and it's "ears" mimic the human head, therefore providing the cues we need.
Actually I don't think that headphones would offer the idea, since they don't present sound to the "pinna" in a way that will allow it to provide the directional and localizational information to form a soundstage and imaging....
Two huge problems here:The pinna, and the related directional filtering is highly individual. That's why generic dummy hear binaural recording is fail to externalize properly for lot of listeners.The other is the stage is moving with the head. Small head movements are very important in localization, and the lack of the effect makes it unrealistic.You are right, that there should be only one set of ITD, ILD and pinna related filtering in the whole recording/reproduction chain, but the later better be yours. That's why I use transaural reproduction for the front stage.
yours. That's why I use transaural reproduction for the front stage.