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Sorry. Those are not diffusers or anything like diffusers. A single angled hard flat surface is anything but diffusion. Diffusion by definition scatters evenly and randomly both in the time and spatial domains. This does nothing but reflect at a different angle. That part helped me right there,,, the above paragraph
I am beginning to hear that mechanical tension is directly related to soundstage tension. For me soundstage tension has always been an issue at higher volumes on my pre amp. Listening to music in high tension mode usually made me keep the volume down. As I tune the tension it reduces a listening fatigue compared with everything tightened right up. There is a definite audible release in the soundstage, it's quite noticeable and you get it off axis too.
Hi Micheal and all Audio Circle members.Do you read what you write?Sure sounds like Jehovah witness !Why your comments are always so long ?I am sure if you wanted, you could cut the bla, bla by at least 50%.Guy 13
You my friend are becoming the master of your own system, and think that is what the hobby should really be about, and will be about. The "fixed" world is well "fixed" or stuck. When people start seeing what they really have here this hobby is going to spin an about face and people are going to be looking at how to "tune" or dial in their systems. This is the world I have put my concentration into. I want to be a part of what is posible in a persons room not what they have had to settle for.
I have always been an advocate for tweaking systems. I used to take the dac boards out and leave them seated on my platform since it seemed to take the edge off. This was recommended by Steve Nugent in-demonstrating a sound he was building. That was as a few years ago before I had young kids around. Now I can't do that any more since I have 5 year old. If you check out my first post on this site it shows how I am willing to try anything to get the sound I want. Adjusting tension is a no brainer now that i have been exposed to it? But it requires a vision for what you want in sound to go and turn the screws. Letting the system dictate to you what you hear,or want to hear only leads to a stagnant outlook on the hobby and a stubborn - "that will not work" attitude.Tuning up system tension has plateaud my ability to get the sound I want. My only question for you is. Where do I send the Xmas card.....lol.
Michael:One thing I'm trying to understand as I'm reading through your comments is whether you are advocating tuning the room to a certain point and that is the end goal, or are you advocating making frequent adjustments depending on the recording you are listening to? Is there a point at which you are able to declare, "this room is tuned!", or is it an ongoing process designed to accommodate the media? Thanks!
hi AJI'm going to be giving tips on designing a system that will play more and stay good sounding longer in posts to come.
Hi Michael,This is a great discussion! Thank you for your patients and willingness to teach. I'm not as lucky as many here and have to listen to my system in a "Public" location in our home. There is a never ending struggle with my loving wife on the way the room looks versus my needs on the way I would like the room to sound. Such is life.I would like to propose an audio myth that this discussion has the possibility to resolve. Here is is!The only way to get the best audio results in a room is to use static professionally produced diffusion an dampening materials. I would like to hear from those that use plants, furniture, window coverings and other means to achieve a high level of room dampening and diffusion to achieve better (and to your point tuneable) sound quality. What are you using and how do you tune it?
Werd Wool is audios best friend. I have had good experiences using wool carpet, compressed wool for chassis dampening. Our Pipedream speakers have a reveal around the outer edge to secure the speaker grill cloth. We do not use the cloth and lost the rubber cord used to hold the cloth in place. On a whim one day in a fabric store I noticed wool rope. HMMMM I though that wool or could work to fill the reveal. Well it did a better job than anticipated. It appears that reveal needed something in there. The result was better clarity and focus. Since the front panel is in two pieces screwed together dampening the outer edge so it does not vibrate appears to be the ticket. We then removed the Wool and the sound suffered. It lost its new found focus and clarity. Cool stuff. charles