0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 10192 times.
Thanks for the info, Josh. My room is 15'Lx12'Wx8'H. I suppose I would start where my speakers are now: 54" from the wall behind them to the mid/front point of their cabinets; 42" from the same point to my side walls and 60" apart with my seat the apex of an equidistant triangle. There is about 58" behind my chair the majority of which is covered with open backed record cabinets courtesy of IKEA. The walls are flat*. Any thoughts? Anyone?Someone told me that Maggie's will not image outside of the speaker itself and I took that to be cause they are more directional than box spealers. That about right?*however, an open legged sofa table is serving as a rack centered on the back wall behind them: http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?action=systems;area=browse;system=1448
Very occasionally the music will produce a sound that grabs my attention because it sounds like it's behind me or far to the side as well.
I've heard things coming from WAY outside of the speakers. Like outside of the house which is impossible. Strange but true.
Au contraire, mon ami.Put on Atom Heart Mother by Pink Floyd and tell me just where the sounds are coming from.
I first noticed the Big Mouth Effect on early Rolling Stones recordings and then it became more pronounced when Aerosmith came out.
Satie, something that I have observed over time with my 2.6's is that I no longer hear the exaggerated image size that I did at first. I theorize that my auditory perception has gone to work on what I am hearing to compensate for this effect. Could be wrong.Not what I really wanted to ask though. I am curious as to how you feel about your shift to the Neo8's. Has the sound signature become mostly dominated by the Neo8's covering the midrange now? The Neo8 or perhaps the Neo10 seems to be a natural consideration for the next step. If you had it to do over again would you stick to your current configuration or might you have gone another way?Noticed your pic you are using now with your moniker. Your old friend? I remember you caring for your very ill dog and wanted to offer some sympathy with what may have come from that. Neil Gaiman quoted part of a poem by Kipling 'The Power of the Dog' on a blog that I frequent. I can't best it ...http://www.kipling.org.uk/poems_dog.htm
Satie,Are you saying that toeing of the speakers can alleviate vertical image height unnaturalness of Maggie speakers?I haven't found this image height issue to be controllable in any meaningful way. I believe this is an inherent "time domain" characteristic (which can't be altered) of the speakers resulting from the physical configuration.I don't listen to mono recordings so haven't really noticed the golf ball effect, but it does beg the question of why a person would choose speakers like Maggies to listen to close-miked recordings. I assume you don't have mono recordings, but that you sum channels in your normal stereo recordings to adjust the speakers and then switch back to normal stereo operation?However, it's interesting that imaging seems to be an important listening priority for some folks. I find the lack of imaging distracting sometimes, but it's the sort of unnaturalness (maybe it should be considered naturalness) that your brain can fairly quickly adapt to even if the recordings are typical poorly recorded studio productions.Cheers,Dave.
First, yes that would be he who pulled my life off the counter and chewed it up. That is at age 11 or 12, he is now 16. Thanks for the Kipling poem.Part of my goal was to go to time coherent and minimal phase XO, which meant either LR4 or 1st order, Since 1st order was doable in PLLXO, I ended up doing that, and had Marchand do an active LR4. That was a product of my experience with the Vandersteens. To make that feasible with the maggie tweeter, you need to cross it over one or two octaves up from where it XOs on the original design- so that low freq material does not reach the tweeter while you are using a 1st order XO. So I would not do a Neo10 since it beams as you go over 2khz, meaning that it needs to be out of the picture at 5khz, which in turn is too low to protect the tweeter at the volumes I play. So I don't see that I would do anything differently but perhaps building a new mid/tweeter panel with closer placement.The dominant character is the bass panels of the Tympani and its magnificent midbass. The Neo8 just makes it sound more like what makes a Tympani speaker a Tympani. The ribbon integrates well with the Neo8 array, better than in the original speaker. The Neo8 does not dominate the character of the speaker in that it was dominated by the sound of the ribbon and the bass panels and is still dominated by those characteristics, just that the bottom two octaves of the ribbon are now produced by the Neo8.
Now that is an interesting perspective with what you have experienced with your configuration. I would have guessed otherwise with the Neo8's voicing the mids for your speakers. Glad I asked. I actually intend to do something about this when I have the time to invest in it. The trick for me is to keep the exercise fun. And not end up with a whole spare room of discontinued equipment.