Do your speakers sound as good at low listening levels as they do at high?
It seems that when I have a chance to audition speakers the sales person has had to increrase the volume up pretty loud before the speaker starts to sound good. In the past I have heard systems sound really good at low levels to where a conversation could be comfortably performed. I like to play my music loud when I can but reality is when the family is at home the volume needs to be turned down. Is there a trade off? Will I have to give up one for the other ? Or have you found a speaker that does both?
Ahoy there Pirate,
What you're talking about is something called the "Fletcher Munson Effect".
Very simply as SPLs decrease, our ability to "hear" the extremes of frequency diminishes. So while a frequency response curve might measure "flat" at any given volume, we may not hear it that way.
Just one of those cases where a set of subjective measurements does not coincide with out actual listening reality.
So how come you have heard recordings that sound reasonably good at low volume?
1) The system had a "loudness" or contour control to boost specific frequencies based on the Fletcher Munson curves
2) Ambient noise was low enough that it didn't obscure the drop outs
3) The recording engineer, actually engineered the recording to be listened to a lower levels
4) I'm sure there are others (but I can't think of any)
Just do a google search for Fletcher Munson and I bet plenty will come up
