0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 23075 times.
The question was about measuring synergy.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 11 Apr 2007, 02:37 pmThe question was about measuring synergy.Hi Kevin, that's why the challenge is to build a whole system. You can't have synergy with just one component
Quote from: JohnR on 12 Apr 2007, 03:08 pmQuote from: Kevin Haskins on 11 Apr 2007, 02:37 pmThe question was about measuring synergy.Hi Kevin, that's why the challenge is to build a whole system. You can't have synergy with just one component The line we draw for components is arbitrary. You could put the amplifier, preamp & loudspeakers all in one box and then I could design something with synergy with just the measurements.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 12 Apr 2007, 03:13 pmQuote from: JohnR on 12 Apr 2007, 03:08 pmQuote from: Kevin Haskins on 11 Apr 2007, 02:37 pmThe question was about measuring synergy.Hi Kevin, that's why the challenge is to build a whole system. You can't have synergy with just one component The line we draw for components is arbitrary. You could put the amplifier, preamp & loudspeakers all in one box and then I could design something with synergy with just the measurements. OK, so what specifically would you be measuring?
Kevin,Nice synopsis of your design process.How do you predict a loudspeakers depth of soundstage? Is this related to your dispersion numbers?Raj
For an amplifier I'd cheat and use something I know sounds good (from the measurements of course).
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 12 Apr 2007, 04:23 pmFor an amplifier I'd cheat and use something I know sounds good (from the measurements of course). Well, that's not true. You know it sounds good (I'll take your words at face value) because you listened to it.You're still being very... non-specific about what exactly you would measure in order to determine synergy between the various parts of this all-in-one-box system. While I'm now quite comfortable with the spelling of the word "measure" and it's variations, I'm less comfortable with this insistence on "measurements" as a concept without (apparently) much idea of what exactly to measure or what criteria determine good vs bad measured performance. For instance, what about the slew rate that Karsten mentioned above? Would that factor into your design?
I think measuring synergy is about like measuring many of these other subjective characteristics. They are hard to nail down to one measurement. With enough money and time we could do research to better quantify what people prefer and tie that back to several measurements but it isn't real practical.