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TomWum ... neutral? How do you know?jules
I figure that I can jump in here and provide my two cents.
For years and years, you could go into any really well known top dollar recording studio with million dollar gear and see sitting right there on the meter bridge of their mega-buck mixing console, one lonely little piss ass Auratone speaker(yes, I said speaker, not speakers). A cheap little full range speaker. They would mix on the big monitors, but still reference to the Auratone in mono. And yes, it had some bearing on the final mix for a lot of recordings you and I enjoy on our mega peeked and tweeked 2 channel systems.Yes, it becomes paradoxical, and in the end, what's important is what sounds good to your ears.
If it makes you warm and fuzzy, then it's all good, y'know?
For years and years, you could go into any really well known top dollar recording studio with million dollar gear and see sitting right there on the meter bridge of their mega-buck mixing console, one lonely little piss ass Auratone speaker(yes, I said speaker, not speakers). A cheap little full range speaker. They would mix on the big monitors, but still reference to the Auratone in mono. And yes, it had some bearing on the final mix for a lot of recordings you and I enjoy on our mega peeked and tweeked 2 channel systems.Yes, it becomes paradoxical, and in the end, what's important is what sounds good to your ears. If it makes you warm and fuzzy, then it's all good, y'know?Cheers
Neutral is judged by ear of course .
Not to pry but what components do you use in your personal reference system?
What I am arguing is that what matters to me is my own pleasure and enjoyment. And if I ultimately derive more pleasure and enjoyment from that which is less "high fidelity," that's what I'll choose every time.
The reason that they have that cheap little speaker there is they want to get an idea how their recording will sound on a car audio system or boombox. Seems pretty practical to me. d.b.
Sure, and I already agreed with that. No contest! Everyone has personal preferences, and nobody else can say they're wrong.
On what do you base that?
If I can't exactly emulate every possible type of tube distortion with two diodes and two resistors, I'm sure I can come close enough to not matter. And give me a pair of 50 cent op-amps and I promise you I'll nail it!
Great question! My objections are two-fold:1) They are not worth the money asked...
...and they are sold under fraudulent pretenses.
You can get perfectly wonderful gear for 1/20th the cost of the really expensive stuff.
2) A lot of boutique gear really is crap.
You will never find a professional recording studio using a power amp with 10 percent distortion, or loudspeakers that have substantial resonance built-in intentionally.
Likewise, some of the most expensive speaker wires you can buy have unacceptably high capacitance. The capacitance can be so high that some (lame boutique) power amps will oscillate at ultrasonic frequencies which then blows out the tweeters.
Agreed 100 percent, which is why I always aim for maximum transparency rather than an intentionally colored sound. Pros use transparent gear, so if you do the same you'll at least get as close as your listening room allows for.
How about you Dan, what is your reference system? All pro audio I assume! Raj
LOL, don't bother, I already have plenty of op-amps.
That's a good point, and perhaps I could have been clearer. I am not opposed to high quality gear! I even have some myself. And I would be silly to put a dollar amount on how much people "should" not pay more than.
I consider claims to be fraudulent when they can be easily shown as untrue using standard scientific practices. The Clever Little Clock certainly qualifies, as does an LP demagnetizer, or the typical claims made by makers of replacement power cords. They claim their products improve the sound quality, but never actually offer proof.
I said I won't put a price limit on what people should pay, but as a guideline you can buy a perfectly wonderful professional quality power amplifier for under $2,000, so paying five or more times that for a "boutique" amp having similar (or worse) power capability and other specs seems a poor purchase decision.
High distortion, poor frequency response, tendency to self-oscillate, all of which I've seen in very expensive products. And for power amps, I've seen models that blow up if run without a loudspeaker connected. I once saw a $17,000 power amp blow up because it had no input connected!
Sure. But even regular folks like to get their money's worth. If a product claims to be very high quality as a way to justify an equally high price tag, should it not be high quality?
True but irrelevant. If Sgt. Peppers has unwanted distortion and rolled off highs, which it does, why make that even worse by using poor playback equipment?
I recently saw a funny quote from Fletcher, one of the more colorful characters in the pro audio forums. Some newbie was asking about toob gear, and Fletcher pointed out that back in the 1960s engineers tried very hard to get away from a "tube" sound. The goal then (as now) was to capture a performance as clearly and cleanly as possible! Over the years since, old audio equipment and technology has become glamorized and even romanticized.
> Is quality to simply be distilled to a set of numbers? <
Yes, I think so. I mean, what else do you think there is?!