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Have you tried SETs and single-drivers?Just wondering.
It's probably safe to say that two audio channels in a sound-field will never give the kind of virtual reality auditory experience that would completely fool your ear-brain system until the relative placement of different sounds changes with the listener's head movement.
It is possible to fool your ear-brain system. The trick is to not use an equilateral triangle setup and to recreate venue accurate reflections and reverberation.
Quote from: stereocilia on 18 Oct 2007, 04:06 pmIt's probably safe to say that two audio channels in a sound-field will never give the kind of virtual reality auditory experience that would completely fool your ear-brain system until the relative placement of different sounds changes with the listener's head movement.It is possible to fool your ear-brain system. The trick is to not use an equilateral triangle setup and to recreate venue accurate reflections and reverberation.
could you point me to some articles or posts about this topic? I'm intrigued. Thanks so muchps beautiful shot of long's...
Hi Sunshinedawg,Are you suggesting that such is possible?That might be an interesting exploration.I find that an admirable goal, but find under normal rooms basically impossible.
BTW, we've strayed pretty far from talk of tectorial membranes and what not. It's all good, though.
Quote from: John Casler on 18 Oct 2007, 05:43 pmHi Sunshinedawg,Are you suggesting that such is possible?That might be an interesting exploration.I find that an admirable goal, but find under normal rooms basically impossible.Yes, such is possible, I've been doing it for years. Check out this sites I linked above they will explain it better than I can. You need three basic elements: 1. speakers located 10o to 20o degrees apart with crosstalk cancellation 2. venue specific early reflection speakers 3. venue specific reverberation speakers.I haven't had an equilateral speaker setup in years. I heard some really goods sounds at the RMAF, some sounded really good tonally, but none had realistic sound fields. It gives me a headache to listen like this now, because my brain/ears keep trying to process where the sound is coming from. Since they can't figure figure out where the music is coming from, they never relax and let me enjoy the music. My system might not be high buck, or tonally anywhere near what some have on this forum, but it produces a natural, realistic sound field that is so non-fatiguing I just listen for hours at a time. BTW, the speaker that gives me the biggest headache is a line source, because not only does it exhibit crosstalk from left to right, but from top to bottom.
sunshinedawg - how well does your system work with Blumlein-type recordings which ordinarily require speakers at a 90 degree included angle?
But that is what I was questioning.These fellows seem to beleive (as I do) that this "sonic teleportation" must happen in a sonic environment, with the fewest distortions added by the room you are in.Fun Stuff