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Do I need to forget about the incredible sounding speakers I've owned or heard with precision Revelators, Illuminators, Satoris, RAAL ribbons, beryllium domes and quality crossovers? Can 10 entry-level speakers sound better for the same budget as a stereo pair of higher quality speakers if they are processed by Auro 3D?
Not sure I'm buying into that and no way can I afford 10 high-quality speakers. We've all been pleased with some of our ~ $200/pr speaker purchases for the money, whether Cambridge Aero, Gallo Classico, Philharmonic/Dayton Affordable Accuracy, etc., but most of us have relegated them to more casual secondary systems and few have found their way into our main systems, except perhaps as rear surrounds for movie effect use.
You can buy speakers "with precision Revelators, Illuminators, Satoris, RAAL ribbons, beryllium domes and quality crossovers" for $1000/pair?
I find that a curious argument.... if you think they are good enough for surrounds, why do you think they are not good enough for height speakers as well?
Have I been under the misconception that loudspeaker quality was an important factor in sound reproduction, where the "rubber meets the road", if you will?Do I need to forget about the incredible sounding speakers I've owned or heard with precision Revelators, Illuminators, Satoris, RAAL ribbons, beryllium domes and quality crossovers? Can 10 entry-level speakers sound better for the same budget as a stereo pair of higher quality speakers if they are processed by Auro 3D?Not sure I'm buying into that and no way can I afford 10 high-quality speakers. We've all been pleased with some of our ~ $200/pr speaker purchases for the money, whether Cambridge Aero, Gallo Classico, Philharmonic/Dayton Affordable Accuracy, etc., but most of us have relegated them to more casual secondary systems and few have found their way into our main systems, except perhaps as rear surrounds for movie effect use.Steve
5.) As absurd as it may seem in this scenario what's missing is diffused bass output. Floyd Toole's work points to the need for multiple subwoofers in residential spaces to avoid +/- 20 dB peaks.
IMO we all have different (individual) sonic priorities. Some are tube guys, some speaker guys, etc. Personally I could never ignore vinyl surface noise like so many seemingly can. This stereo/HT/immersive phenomenon seems to fit that observation. Being an old music priority guy I take the following exceptions:1.) This is a very artificial and arbitrary construct. In a stereo recording process tracks are mixed and mastered by professionals to create a realistic stereo image. Immersive Audio takes that stereo recording and creates channels that didn't exist in the original and is done without any intelligent skill applied to the individual recording.2.) This is a very awkward setup for nearly any existing domestic space. Only a blind mother could love all the wires, stands, and speakers everywhere. And like HT formats it requires adherence to sitting in a sweet spot (or a huge room) more so than stereo. 3.) Comparison of ten $200 speakers to a pair of quality $1000 each speakers frankly is ridiculous and cause to dismiss the whole concept. OTOH using ten $1000 each quality speakers (with comparable quality amplification and cabling) greatly increases costs.4.) Ideally more channels, properly done, will yield a more defined 3D soundstage. However the devil is in the details and way too many details are missing. And in general complexity breeds distortion. It may be initially entertaining, but like so many other special effect speakers (omni, dipole, array) and formats (quad, SACD, DVDa) I expect it will be abandoned as the market is moving towards smaller and simpler solutions.5.) As absurd as it may seem in this scenario what's missing is diffused bass output. Floyd Toole's work points to the need for multiple subwoofers in residential spaces to avoid +/- 20 dB peaks.
IMO we all have different (individual) sonic priorities. Some are tube guys, some speaker guys, etc. Personally I could never ignore vinyl surface noise like so many seemingly can. This stereo/HT/immersive phenomenon seems to fit that observation.
This is a very artificial and arbitrary construct. In a stereo recording process tracks are mixed and mastered by professionals to create a realistic stereo image. Immersive Audio takes that stereo recording and creates channels that didn't exist in the original and is done without any intelligent skill applied to the individual recording.
Ideally more channels, properly done, will yield a more defined 3D soundstage. However the devil is in the details and way too many details are missing.
Witchdoctor, thank you for the detailed description. Not sure I'll jump on anything now, but will revisit this when my AVR dies.In the meantime though, I might rig up something to those "front high" outputs and see what happens.I think it's just the internal Denon trickery and voodoo, and not anything as fancy as Atmos, Aura, etc...
They're a bit old, but I've got some pics in my gallery.Anything I do in the short term will be ugly and not very worthy of a photo.
Bob - there are still some of us left that care more about sound than looks.
I think the thread title was an excellent model for a good thread, besides interested parties it drew a handful of grumps complaining about the title and yet couldn't help themselves from returning to make a few more posts that added nothing to the conversation but did help the thread grow. It's easy to see how that has become an internet business model.Now, I still wonder if a sub array would be important and more effective than a single in immersive audio?
Now, I still wonder if a sub array would be important and more effective than a single in immersive audio?