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I say be prepared for surprises. Don't fear them, enjoy them, just as you learn to love a new composer or the solution to a set of higher-order differential equations!
(Ask Phil Lamm to explain the difference bewteen problems that can be solved recursively vs. simultanously)
What would you hook them up to?Just a thought
Quote from: JohnR on 7 Aug 2006, 12:27 amI'd start with the amp. IME that's the hardest part to get right...How do you pick an amp if you don't know what the speakers are?Would you simply get an amp that would be powerful enough to mate with almost all speakers out there?
I'd start with the amp. IME that's the hardest part to get right...
Actually, for separates, if I knew a preamp that was a "perfect" straightwire, I would choose the preamp first. Then the amp/speaker/source/etc.
It takes so long to get all the pieces together, and even longer to tweak a system for maximum performance. If I were to do it all over again, were would I start? First, I think I would find the speakers that fits my taste. I then would trial numerous amplifiers to mate with the speakers until I found the one that works best with the speakers. After that, I would seek a transparent preamplifier that allowed the amplifier to show its merits. Next, would be the digital source. The last components would be cables, conditioners, and tweaks. How would you approach starting over?
Quote from: zybar on 7 Aug 2006, 12:38 amQuote from: JohnR on 7 Aug 2006, 12:27 amI'd start with the amp. IME that's the hardest part to get right...How do you pick an amp if you don't know what the speakers are?Would you simply get an amp that would be powerful enough to mate with almost all speakers out there?It's just that it's been my experience that the amp is harder to get right than the speakers... and should therefore get sorted out first, if there's going to be an order about it (which is the title of the thread).
I find it hard to believe that a component with distortion from 20hz to 20khz measured in percentage numbers of less than 1% (even $300 denon receiver does this),
Quote from: kfr01 on 10 Aug 2006, 05:52 amI find it hard to believe that a component with distortion from 20hz to 20khz measured in percentage numbers of less than 1% (even $300 denon receiver does this),Well, I mean... are you suggesting that one should pair a $300 receiver with very expensive loudspeakers because they have comparable THD numbers - ?
Not sure if this is taking the thread off track, but here's a distortion plot of the (highly regarded) Seas Excel 17cm driver:http://ldsg.snippets.org/graphics/seas/e0017dist.jpgDistortion is 0.2% - 0.3% in its best range, and above 1% below about 100 Hz.For whatever reason, you can hear "through" all of that to what the amplifier is doing.