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It seems such a shame some of the folks here want to shoot the idea down.
Most of the members here are responsible enough to only give praise to the products that peaked their interest.
MaxCast said:"What the Chicago and WI guys should do is do something like a AK fest between Chicago and Milwaukee. Start out with a couple of rooms every year and see what happens." Clayton from Emerald Physics and Duke from Audiokinesis felt we were onto something here as well: a Chicago or Midwestern Audiofest. There is a fairly high concentration of audiophiles in the Midwest. Clayton said he had been getting a ton of calls from the upper Midwest asking if there were dealers in their area. There were none. I think we could start small, rent some hotel rooms, and give people a chance to hear some of these companies products. I think the potential turnout would be ponentially sizeable particularly since not everyone makes it to RMAF. Is it a perfect solution. No. It would obviously generate similar fruit in terms of threads and reviews to RMAF. Could we or should we control participant numbers, try to take more control over the setting acoustically? I guess. This could also form the basis for a smaller, grass roots phenomenon as MaxCast suggested and be reproduced elsewhere. I would appreciate feedback on this as a majority of you have more experience than I....
Right on Double Ugly. I envision this as starting small. Rich Sacks, the curent president of the Chicago Audio Society, mentioned a speaker showcase put on in the Chicago a few years ago featuring Jim Salk and Ellis Audio. They rented a hotel room or two and apparently had a good time. I plan on chatting with them about their experience. I was also planning on speaking with the RMAF gang to gather more info. I am less inclined to do the side by side comparisons and would rather provide separate rooms for listening...we'll see. This will hopefully grow beyond three manufacturers and make for a groovy time.
Nearly a million words in this thread so far, and a lot of fretting about fairness, but no mention that the sort of person who'd consider any of these relatively little-known, boutique, specialist's specialist speakers, is (obviously) probably also the sort of person with enough brains to realize that how the speaker performs in some auditorium showcase won't guarantee how it performs in his listening room. Speaker designers should concentrate on designing the best speaker they know how, instead of whinging about not having control over every informal event that comes along. It's unseemly. Your speakers are gonna get judged in all variety of circumstances beyond your control, and people are usually bright enough to sort out the variables for themselves. It all boils down to personal taste anyway.
Quote from: BrianM on 31 Jan 2008, 03:29 pmNearly a million words in this thread so far, and a lot of fretting about fairness, but no mention that the sort of person who'd consider any of these relatively little-known, boutique, specialist's specialist speakers, is (obviously) probably also the sort of person with enough brains to realize that how the speaker performs in some auditorium showcase won't guarantee how it performs in his listening room. Speaker designers should concentrate on designing the best speaker they know how, instead of whinging about not having control over every informal event that comes along. It's unseemly. Your speakers are gonna get judged in all variety of circumstances beyond your control, and people are usually bright enough to sort out the variables for themselves. It all boils down to personal taste anyway.all you say is true... but... speakers knowingly being auditioned in conditions they were never designed for? seems a bit ridiculous, to me. much as i would love to hear all these speakers, i wouldn't be interested in hearing them in a set-up that would give me no indication of how they sound in their intended use...ymmv,doug s.
Quote from: doug s. on 31 Jan 2008, 03:56 pmQuote from: BrianM on 31 Jan 2008, 03:29 pmNearly a million words in this thread so far, and a lot of fretting about fairness, but no mention that the sort of person who'd consider any of these relatively little-known, boutique, specialist's specialist speakers, is (obviously) probably also the sort of person with enough brains to realize that how the speaker performs in some auditorium showcase won't guarantee how it performs in his listening room. Speaker designers should concentrate on designing the best speaker they know how, instead of whinging about not having control over every informal event that comes along. It's unseemly. Your speakers are gonna get judged in all variety of circumstances beyond your control, and people are usually bright enough to sort out the variables for themselves. It all boils down to personal taste anyway.all you say is true... but... speakers knowingly being auditioned in conditions they were never designed for? seems a bit ridiculous, to me. much as i would love to hear all these speakers, i wouldn't be interested in hearing them in a set-up that would give me no indication of how they sound in their intended use...ymmv,doug s.Again my point: people are smart enough to know that a speaker wasn't designed for a large auditorium, and will interpret the outcome accordingly. If that weren't the case, nobody would've jumped all over it here, as nearly everyone has.I wouldn't be interested in that kind of setup either. If someone buys a speaker because it sounded great in the auditorium, well, how much chance is there he'd pick the "right" speaker under ideal conditions anyway? He's just playing around with his money at that point.
...Again my point: people are smart enough to know that a speaker wasn't designed for a large auditorium, and will interpret the outcome accordingly. If that weren't the case, nobody would've jumped all over it here, as nearly everyone has...
Brian,I'm confused by your posts. First you say that speaker builders shouldn't whine about being eval'd in less than ideal circumstances because speakers will reside in all kinds of setups (big auditoriums??). You also said listeners are smarter than to put much credence into auditorium sound, and will make their own decisions. Yet now you say that you are not a fan of that auditorium setup either and "If someone buys a speaker because it sounded great in the auditorium, well, how much chance is there he'd pick the "right" speaker......." ?? What is your point, exactly?
Quote from: BrianM on 31 Jan 2008, 04:30 pm...Again my point: people are smart enough to know that a speaker wasn't designed for a large auditorium, and will interpret the outcome accordingly. If that weren't the case, nobody would've jumped all over it here, as nearly everyone has...brian, i understand your point. again, my point is i don't understand why anyone would even want to hear the speakers, as initially proposed. as prewiously alluded to by someone else, i would love to test drive a ferrari. (or lotus exige, or ariel atom, or ducati hypermotard, or???) but, i have no interest trying these on ice...ymmv,doug s
Just be prepared to plunk your speakers down into an unfamiliar environment, hooked up to gear known to sound great wth some other speaker, and have little to no setup time. That's a make-or-break, scary proposition, but if things go well you can build a good reputation.