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I would like to read an article by you on this topic. I am sure the scientific comunity would be very interested in your findings. I am sure you could submit to both psychological and, acoustics (JASA?) journals. Besides you listening what research (that you have corroborated on your own) are you basing your claims on? Psychoacousticly speaking how can you PROVE that an ideal setup as you describe will cause the same results in the brain. i.e. listening to the exact same performace at the hall and at your home. What measurements of the brain would you (based on your research) choose to analyze the outcome of your setup. You also claimed in a previous thread that you use this technique for studio recorded material. All you are doing here is contaminating the source.
Something I just thought of is rock concerts. Most that I have been to have two stacks Left and Right. How does your set up treat that?
That's the whole point, you are not open to a new idea.
Your way misses the mark. I am open to anyway to do audio, but nothing you have said explains why your way is superior to mine. Just because you've done something so long for one way does not make it right. I'm not trying to be a jerk either. I don't understand how an equilateral triangle is suppose to be optimal when it adds comb filtering and time domain errors to the playback chain.
Why do you so staunchly defend it? Have tried anything else? Have you researched why everyone uses it? I actually have, and the reasons are mostly circumstantial and not scientific.
Ultimately, I listen to a lot of studio recorded music and I live with stereo in my home, with its warts and all, but I cannot buy into the arguements that DGO puts forth. This is a flawed rationale throughout its fabric.
Live venues capture both the first arrival and the reflected sound at the mic.
Quote from: JoshK on 16 Jan 2008, 02:41 pmLive venues capture both the first arrival and the reflected sound at the mic.What is the estimated lapse in time between the first arrival and the reflected sound hitting the microphone, please.
Quote from: BrianM on 16 Jan 2008, 03:14 pmQuote from: JoshK on 16 Jan 2008, 02:41 pmLive venues capture both the first arrival and the reflected sound at the mic.What is the estimated lapse in time between the first arrival and the reflected sound hitting the microphone, please.Depends on the room the sound is in.Sound travels at roughly 1100 ft per second (at sea level). So you can extrapolate from that.
DGO is just the typical naysayer. The main problem I see here is nobody involved has any credentials in any of the scientific fields discussed. Experience in doing something one way is not creditable.
This conversation is very similar to things I deal with on a daily basis. In science the norm ALWAYS has the benefit of the doubt. There will ALWAYS be people who will defend the norm to the ends of the earth because that is how "we have always done it".
The proof is in the pudding.
Also I can get defensive if someone says they can do something better then say my HPLC or Mass Spec. I know how to use my instruments and I know what they can do. I am sure they will be beat but I need to be convinced. DGO is just the typical naysayer. The main problem I see here is nobody involved has any credentials in any of the scientific fields discussed.
DGO,Sorry to come off and harsh and dismissive. I was trying to make the point that I just do buy into the equilateral triangle is the ultimate in reproduction anymore. Maybe for studio recordings, but then there really isn't an "ultimate" anymore, at least as I see it.
Since we're talking about a small fraction of a second (which is why I posed the question), back and side reflections as experienced in the hall might essentially be indistinguishable from the total sound one is hearing. When I'm at Orchestra Hall I certainly don't hear "orchestra, then reflections", I just hear one generalized, ambient sound.
stsfan,I don't think you are going to find a lot of people with tons of scientific credentials because those people really aren't interested in the problem or at the very least only work on pushing what we already have a tiny bit forward. I can tell you that a lot of people who are very scientific in nature (a few engineers of another field, etc) have pushed this method forward. It is just that old habits die hard. Stereo has a half century of entrenchment and trying to sell anyone on anything else is an uphill battle, so you aren't likely to see any commercial products to this end. However, then doesn't mean it isn't credible.
If your assumption is that I'm one of those people you describe, you couldn't be farther from the truth.
Fair enough. Then do the homework on the topic. Or not.
Even if everything came at the same time, does direction matter? I think empirically and heurestically it can be shown it does.
QuoteIf your assumption is that I'm one of those people you describe, you couldn't be farther from the truth.Then your response should have been "I should try that and hear for myself"
QuoteEven if everything came at the same time, does direction matter? I think empirically and heurestically it can be shown it does.Doesn't this assume that you'd have to be able to identify which direction reflections come from when sitting in the original venue?
Yeah, and then somebody will come along and tell me that listening to 2 channel audio is better with a couple of bananas up my nose.... I've done my homework......I think I've mentioned that.