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What you're describing is inherient with stereo reproduction even when using two single driver speakers. What I'm talking about is driver intrgration for a single point-source speakler. So, assume that you are listening to a single speaker and then explain to me why a change in tonal balance is desirable.
No, I'm talking about that we try to create a single perfect speaker, and then use two of them together in a way which destroys almost all the achievements we made.
So, I suppose you listen to mono using a single driver Fostex speaker? That's the only way out of this and probably deserving of a separate RELATED thread.
Quote from: John AshmanSo, I suppose you listen to mono using a single driver Fostex speaker? That's the only way out of this and probably deserving of a separate RELATED thread.
Quote from: John AshmanSo, I suppose you listen to mono using a single driver Fostex speaker? That's the only way out of this and probably deserving of a separate RELATED thread. I would love to see a seperate thread where Frank tells us how he does it.As mentioned I don't know how he does it, but by accounts from the NY Rave he does it well...his playback system is inexpensive but the best one that most all f them ever heard.
csero - what you're saying is always the case, but we listen to two speakers playing different things, not the same thing, certainly not pink noise. A third speaker improves this. 5 speakers up front would make it even better. But that's a reality that has NOTHING do to with DEQX and what it does. You might as well say "but wheels go around" or "the sun comes up". So, my question to you is - SO WHAT?
1st of all, i don't see why john needs to get steamed - who *cares* if someone is bringing up an alternative wiew? doesn't change the deqx thing, imo...and, re: frank's view, he doesn't do mono, he does ambiophonics; for info go here:http://www.ambiophonics.org/index.htmdoug s.
Measurements are key to know that the wave form produced by the speaker represents the signal going in. Listening to music is needed to make sure that the waveform *sounds* like real music. But in any case, DEQX is NOT the ultimate solution, no one said it was. It is dangerously close to making *stereo* reproduction as good as it gets. I think it would take at least 6-10 mini-monitors and 3 or more subs to get close to realism and DEQX could help there too if you had the money. DEQX is a tool, not a me ...
Quote from: doug s.1st of all, i don't see why john needs to get steamed - who *cares* if someone is bringing up an alternative wiew? doesn't change the deqx thing, imo...and, re: frank's view, he doesn't do mono, he does ambiophonics; for info go here:http://www.ambiophonics.org/index.htmdoug s.No. Ambiophonics is just a small subset of technologies trying to recreate the original soundfield around the listener. It works surprisingly well with the existing library of records, but defin ...
csero, don't you place your main two channel speakers wery close together, w/sound absorption on the plane between the speakers all the way up to the listening position; then use surround channels being fed signal from a jvc xpa-1010 processor, which has twenty mapped venues of different halls programmed into it?
while never setting up the two man channels as ralph glasgal recommends, i *have* used a jvc xpa-1010 to good effect. but, to be honest, once i went to tubes, the jvc remained off most of the time. in my huge space, it really wasn't adding much to the party... but, i still wish i had that xpa-1010 - another unfortunate wictim of a domestic dispute..
John, Yes, the ambiphonics sounds somewhat similar to maybe Meridian Tri-field or, at least, the goal is the same. But all they'd need to is EXPLAIN it somewhere without all the indepth philosophy stuff.
But it is realy OT.