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I've also got an Aberdeen modded Tact 2.0s and if your system is anything like mine, this made a huge difference.
Mike, Sorry to sidetrack a little. Which version of the power supply and DAC card have you got from Aberdeen????? I have his version-6...and it's just getting better and better and better... aa aa
Sorry to sidetrack a little.
Hello Alig, You mention he "recently" purchased the Usher BE speakers. Aside from the room treatments (very important) could it also be an issue of burn-in on the speakers or even system as a whole. If he bought these new and they don't have much time on them, his evaluation may be premature?
My speakers probably cost as much as the shipping crates for that stuff, but when I once heard them in another room I had a similar reaction. At that point I knew I was done experimenting with equipment and that progress was only going to be attainable by acoustical changes. Part of the sales pitch is of course Diana Krall's records which are the peanut butter on the audiophile mousetrap. It's kind of the equivalent of the little THX video on DVDs. Who wouldn't be impressed? Of course when the hi-fi honeymoon is over you may come to the realization that not EVERY record has that same saliva-crackling, floaty hot chick sound and that eventually you'll need some waffle with your maple syrup. Thems the breaks.
Very few people do this- I didn't when I first started and besides that my listening room changed as most are likely to over time- but I think the wise thing to do is to give the room you would be intending to set up in a full measure in the thinking process particularly with regard to speakers. For example, if the seating position will be relatively close, a three or four way design with front firing surface mounted drivers may not have the distance to coalesce. Or, if the bass driver is large, it might overload a small room. Stuff like that. Where a person will be sitting and how much distance there will be to the room's surfaces is also important to the end game. This can be guessed at using a person's good sense (if they have the experience) or the good sense of others. Just looking at those Usher's and I'm thinking they would benefit from a mid size and larger room and that the other way around would be a mistake. If you get the speaker to room relationship right, the need for wall treatment is minimized or reduced. That's my experience and there has been a lot of it. We are a pretty impulsive lot, I think. To avoid spending more than I have or that a person needs to, think total synergy! And do a little research.