Does anybody know why Bryston isn't interested in EQ technology? Could the likes of Meridian and Lexicon and Halcro and TCS and mass-produced manufacturers like Denon have it all wrong?
According to James Tanner, yes: Meridian, Denon, Lexicon, Tag McLaren, TacT and all the others have
all got it wrong. Some links to previous discussions may be found here:
http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=19653&postdays=0&postorder=asc&highlight=room&start=18See also:
http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=20424&start=9His principal objection seems to be that room correction works well only in one "sweet spot" and can have an adverse effect on listening at other points in the room. There is
some truth to this, but:
a) there are now a number of room correction systems available that are specifically designed to work over a large area;
b) some SP1.7 owners are the only people who listen to their unit, so they're going to be sitting in the sweet spot and don't care about the rest of the room;
c) any form of correction or EQ can be
switched off if you don't like the effect of it, thus resulting in sound that is identical to non-EQ'ed sound;
d) room correction is only one small part of what a proper EQ system is capable of, and this objection doesn't apply to most of the rest.
It also does not have video switching capabilities like others. It does sounds more open much better in analog bypass mode compaired to Lexicon.
The SP1.7 does indeed sound better than even the Lexicon MC12B in analogue bypass mode. It also sounds a lot worse than the MC12B when doing absolutely anything else. In addition, it suffers badly when you compare features. An MC12B is blessed with the likes of Logic 7, the ability to do bass management on DVD-Audio sound, video switching, a very good room EQ system, proprietary bass management algorithms using multiple subwoofers, mutiple zones, etc., etc.
However, given the price differential, this isn't entirely surprising. I don't think comparisons with Lexicon are really relevant.
I get it. Focus on audio quality; that's what Bryston does best. Then why doesn't it explore its own implementation of EQ. That's audio, not video.
To my mind focusing on audio quality
requires an EQ system.

I wouldn't hold out much hope for this, though. Bryston just doesn't "do" proprietary digital features.
EQ is similar to Video which can have negative effects on the purity of sound. Sorry there are no tone controls or loudness boost either
Poppycock.
I actually agree with Bryston's decision not to include video switching in the SP1.7. Video switching requires a lot of extra hardware, which would put the price of the unit up dramatically. It's something that is also difficult and/or expensive to keep up-to-date - any new video-switching processor now really needs to support high-definition HDMI switching, but most current models can only handle analogue video. Worse still, the hardware necessary to perform video switching generates a lot of electrical noise and interference; it could very easily degrade the SP1.7's audio performance. The problem of processors doing video switching has been solved, but it's an expensive trade-off.
So, all in all, the decision to make a cheaper processor with the best possible sound and no video (rather than a cheaper one with video and poorer sound, or a more expensive one with video and the same sound quality) was, IMO, the correct one.
However,
none of the above objections applies to an EQ system. EQ is something that is achieved entirely in
software - there is no extra hardware which will lie unused if EQ is switched off. Granted, one has to budget for software development time, but there are off-the-shelf EQ software systems available, including at least one specifically designed for Texas Instruments DSPs (such as the one the upgraded SP1.7 will feature).
Even more importantly, software EQ
can be switched off. This is
not like switching off a piece of dedicated hardware: if EQ capability is added to the system but the user chooses not to activate it then, by definition, the sound he gets will be
absolutely identical to the sound he gets without an EQ option available. Adding an EQ system therefore requires
ABSOLUTELY NO COMPROMISE AT ALL to people who don't wish to use it. It is
preposterous to suggest that the processor is somehow a better product because it lacks EQ.