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Crown International of Elkhart, Indiana makes some of the best amplifiers in the world. You will find them driving speakers in most of the top recording studios in the country. It is those amplifiers that drive the monitors that mixing and mastering sound engineers use to make the CD's you buy and play on your system.
So your position is that all DACs sound the same?
And are these MP3s you're referring to something you can obtain via download? If so, where?
FMW,I'm a little confused by your argument position. You state that you have SACD's and DVD-Audio discs, so you must appreciate the advantage of hi-resolution playback over redbook, and yet you rip to 320k MP3 cuz you can't really tell the difference?
You say that vinyl setups make a big difference but amps and preamps don't. You think room acoustics are important but your surround setup of mixed drivers isn't important. No offense, but I think your priorities are just like the rest of us; you value somethings over others, which is fine; but it does not put you in a great position to speak empirically about "all good amps sound the same" as if it were without debate. It sounds like it just isn't important to you, that's all.
Quote from: fmw on 23 Oct 2007, 02:05 pmCrown International of Elkhart, Indiana makes some of the best amplifiers in the world. You will find them driving speakers in most of the top recording studios in the country. It is those amplifiers that drive the monitors that mixing and mastering sound engineers use to make the CD's you buy and play on your system.Who told you that? What studios specifically?I own a Crown K2 and it's OK, great even for sub duties, but I wouldn't want to listen to it long term as a 2 channel amp.The Professional amps that Crown makes are usually for DJ's and touring bands that need bulletproof lightweight amps that are easy to transport. They are used in Schools, churchs, bars and large venues for sound systems as well.I don't know of any big name studio's using them though, although for home studios of starving bands I could certainly see it.
Crown makes a wide line of amplifiers. Some of them are cheap sound reinforcement amps and others are expensive power amps. Go review the line. You will see what I mean. Where did I get my statement about Crown being used in top recording studios? From Crown. I'll contact them to see if I can get a list for you with specifics. They aren't far away from here.
All I know is that this conversation has me wondering whether I need to go for a psychological eval, lol. I already know my hearing is excellent cause it's only been a few years since it's been tested. (I have a degree in psych, and for sensory psych we went through all sorts of tests on one another....fun times!) There are times when I hear differences among gear/speakers, and times when I don't. I wish I could be where you are and just not really notice them, cause it would probably save me a lot of money, but the fact is that I DO hear them. To my ears, room treatments and speakers make the most difference, but I can discern among other types of gear, too. The one time when I don't remember hearing a big difference was when I went from a Parasound 5-channel amp to some Outlaw Audio monoblocks. That was one change I could have done without cause I got the Parasound for a song. I also have yet to hear any difference in audio cables, whereas with video I did notice a difference when i picked up a nicer quality component cable from Blue Jeans Cables. I dunno...I just fall back on what's important, and that's that you are enjoying your system and music, and I'm focused on doing the same
Quote from: fmw on 23 Oct 2007, 02:59 pmCrown makes a wide line of amplifiers. Some of them are cheap sound reinforcement amps and others are expensive power amps. Go review the line. You will see what I mean. Where did I get my statement about Crown being used in top recording studios? From Crown. I'll contact them to see if I can get a list for you with specifics. They aren't far away from here.I did review their line and their "D" series are the only ones mentioned for studio work. My contention is that the TOP studios don't use them, but I could see where some studios more concerned with money than sonics would.A list of top studios who use their amps for more than sub duties (playback, mixing etc..) would be wonderful.
These discussions are pointless if you ask me, one sides points to their DBX tests and the other side doesn't believe in DBX tests, so the discussion is going to go nowhere. Its not much different than a proselytizer using his book to prove his religion.
I think Dave's suggestion is what I'd do, but I might even use the receiver's amp on the rears and just use external for the front three.
Quote from: JoshK on 22 Oct 2007, 02:16 pmI think Dave's suggestion is what I'd do, but I might even use the receiver's amp on the rears and just use external for the front three. That's what I do. Denon 3808 + ATI 1506 = George
Interesting Anecdote, the designer of the Crown K series is an audiophile who like the crown's for bass amps but wouldn't dare use them full range.
Before I started SP Tech I worked for 9 years in the engineering department, for the Techron Division of Crown International. We built audio amplifiers with such high levels of power that they were used in the medical MRI industry (Mostly by General Electric). 40,000-watt amplifiers were the standard size we were manufacturing.On the first prototype switching power converter that I worked on, I refined the gate drive (IGBTs) circuitry of a 60,000 KVA, 5kHz H-Bridge power converter. When the early prototypes failed they would short out and blow up like a shotgun going off. When that happened, the current was so high that it couldn’t be measured. The magnetic field it produced in the 3-phase 208V power lines was so strong that it would snap the wires against the inside walls of the conduit so hard the walls throughout the lab would shake. The first time it happened I counted 15 people from throughout the engineering wing that piled in the lab to see if we were all right.We discovered that the 5KHz transformer was saturating due to core “flux walking,” thus causing a dead short circuit on the output of the H-Bridge. The top 3 engineers developed a method of sensing core saturation…but it didn’t work. I developed an implementation that did work and it saved the project.After that, we moved on to an 8-phase, 2 MHz tracking power converter (we called it the “polyphase buck”) with the same KVA as the previous unit. By then I was the lead technician and worked directly under the head of R&D – Mr. Gerald Stanley: http://www.prosoundweb.com/install/commentary/kc/crn/gi.phpHe’s the guy that started the entire solid-state power amp revolution by developing the Crown DC 300 – the first high power SS amp in the world.Anyway…not only was I responsible for helping to make the thing work, but I also had to train all of the production and service technicians. Before I left I had also developed a mechanical modification that decreased construction time, increased throughput and made serviceability possible, such that it saved the company something to the tune of $2M/year. The upshot is that I’ve worked in some of the highest power, state-of-the-art electronics in the world…right here in the cornfields of Indiana.-Bob