Hi,
I just read an interesting discusison on a seperate forum on the voicing of monitor speakers. From what I understand, the nicely measured frequency response curves only sound correct to a human ear for a given speaker at a specific reference level that the speaker designer picked due to loudness perception.
The argument is, that you can't make a speaker that sounds correct at 80db and 100db SPL at the same time unless you do some form of correction.
This very much concurs with my personal experience that my setup does not sound correct unless I reach a certain sound pressure level. Around 75-80db for my Harbeth Monitor 40.
This makes me wonder whether we could get a loudness corrected digital volume mode from Bryston. I would think this should not be too hard to do and would bring great value if listening at lower than reference levels. Why has no one build this in yet?
I assume you would need the level at which your speakers sound flat as an input parameter and then when you turn the volume down or up the DSP could do the loudness adjustment in the digital domain, maybe just affecting the lower frequencies and leaving the midband alone.
This could simply show up as another surround mode similar to passthrough.
In the evening I always have to resort to headphones and this would allow me to enjoy my system at lower levels without the perceived loss of full frequency reproduction.
James, given your past answers on this forum I suspect you will ask your digital engineer about this .....
Any chance of actually posting his responses

Cheers
Thomas