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I'm not sure how that can be "fact" given that e.g. Linkwitz says he prefers no room treatments, and the technical matter - I should say fact - concerning higher direct-to-room sound with dipoles.
David:If two speaker systems play the same recording using the same electronics (same room, set-up as well as possible) and one presents it as "you are there" and the other presents it as "they are there", it is mainly due to differences (sometimes very small) in their deviation from reproducing a flat frequency response. To a lesser extent, their differences in phase and group delay characteristics will affect this as well.A perfect speaker should do both.OBs can do precise imaging (mine do) if set-up in a large room, far from walls or using lots of room treatments.The type of music doesn't matter. It's the way it was recorded and mastered. Also the ability of your audio system to resolve low level information. A good test is how well you can hear the space between the artist/instrument and the microphone. I also like to choose chorale works (acappella) with 8-25 voices and improve upon the ability to discern individual voices.YMMVChris H.
Box speakers and solid state amps mimic the master tapes best. Tubes and OB mimic actual live music best.
and, regarding the "fact" concerning higher direct-to-room sound, i disagree. dipoles certainly have a lobing effect, where they reduce sound output at the sides, but they obviously have a higher indirect-to-room sound re: their output from the rear.
Yes, they radiate to the rear and not to the side (or top). The net effect is that a dipole has higher direct-to-reverberant ratio than a monopole, that's not really a subjective question. For conventional speakers, which are neither dipole or monopole, I expect it would be somewhere in between. For some reason, everybody forgets that almost every speaker radiates to the rear below some frequency.
i agree w/scotty here completely. ob is dipole.
The problem is radiation patterns and power response. Live music has omnidirectional radiation patterns and even power response. But box speakers have neither of these characteristics. OB speakers are closer to ideal in these two areas, although even OBs are still not perfect. Much better, but not perfect. Because nothing is perfect.
Tyson, a live performance from an acoustical instrument usually does not have an out phase wave radiating from the rear of the instrument. In this respect a dipole has a very different radiation from a live acoustical instrument. A closer approach, radiation pattern wise, is found in the radiation patterns of Ohm and MBL loudspeakers which are mostly phase coherent omnidirectional speakers.Scotty[/color]
The suggestion is that LF is radiated in all directions regardless of the design, and OB radiates HF WITH the LF where box speakers only send it forward.
... regarding the "fact" concerning higher direct-to-room sound, i disagree. dipoles certainly have a lobing effect, where they reduce sound output at the sides, but they obviously have a higher indirect-to-room sound re: their output from the rear.
I'm not really playing the devils advocate (ok, yes I am) But the "way of the audiophile" would suggest that the truth of the recorded event is what we are seeking to reproduce and hear at the listening position. Does not the OB presentation add a false ambiance, much like what you could add with DSP or even (gasp) equalization or tone controls?