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Thanks Doac and nice bike Doug.When you adjust the levels - do you just listen to music and adjust or do you send white/pink noise thru?thanks again,Jeff
When you adjust the levels - do you just listen to music and adjust or do you send white/pink noise thru?
I had the same thought about the crossover/equalizer......that it was not set up correctly. So I looked into it, figured it all out, and made sure all settings were "flat". Then I selected the "correct" pre-programmed setting for my situation as per the manual. Matter of fact, spkr distance from front wall, and the rest of my room dimensions were almost identical to the stated ideal for one of the settings.....#3 I think. But it's been awhile so I'm not 100% sure. It sounded so dead, soft, and recessed that I actually had to goose (= increase) both the bass and the treble by 8 db to get any kind of decent energy out of them!The other thing is my buddy used the same equalizer at his place and the CS2 sounded good there.He did not touch it before handing it off to me, so I don't think it was an equalizer setting problem.The room may be to blame, but every speaker I have had in here has sounded at least good....and most sound excellent. As you can see in my setup, I can place them well into the room and away from boundaries.That leaves the finger of blame on the amps, or maybe cabling.Possibly not a matcho simpatico.The mystery remains...and will probably stay unsolved!
Has anyone measured the CS2 in-room low-frequency (f3) cutoff?
Quote from: toobluvr on 24 Jun 2008, 12:32 amI had the same thought about the crossover/equalizer......that it was not set up correctly. So I looked into it, figured it all out, and made sure all settings were "flat". Then I selected the "correct" pre-programmed setting for my situation as per the manual. Matter of fact, spkr distance from front wall, and the rest of my room dimensions were almost identical to the stated ideal for one of the settings.....#3 I think. But it's been awhile so I'm not 100% sure. It sounded so dead, soft, and recessed that I actually had to goose (= increase) both the bass and the treble by 8 db to get any kind of decent energy out of them!The other thing is my buddy used the same equalizer at his place and the CS2 sounded good there.He did not touch it before handing it off to me, so I don't think it was an equalizer setting problem.The room may be to blame, but every speaker I have had in here has sounded at least good....and most sound excellent. As you can see in my setup, I can place them well into the room and away from boundaries.That leaves the finger of blame on the amps, or maybe cabling.Possibly not a matcho simpatico.The mystery remains...and will probably stay unsolved! I don't think that room is good for an open baffle type set up. Those stairs to the left are going to eat anything that reflects off the left rear, as will it eat anything from the right wall. You really need more of a rectangular box, or else the expansiveness of sound you get from open baffle speakers won't be there.
Well then.....maybe that explains it! I don't know a huge amount about room acoustics, but I do consider myself extremely lucky to get such good sound with zero treatments. This is with the many conventional dynamic speakers I have had in here. Most folks marvel at the bass and even tonal balance.Refreshing change from my apt in Manhattan were everything sounded like doody...no matter what I did!
That looks like a fairly decent room. However bass performance will suffer if they are pulled too far out into the room. My OB experience was anything much past 4~4.5' and the bass would quickly roll off.
All the pics of the CS2 I have seen, have them a foot or two from theside walls and toe'd in - as opposed to the 1/3rds rule like the abovepicture seems to use. I assume the CS2's like to float a big full image.Would that have anything to do with the experience?
Quote from: toobluvr on 27 Jun 2008, 01:10 pmWell then.....maybe that explains it! I don't know a huge amount about room acoustics, but I do consider myself extremely lucky to get such good sound with zero treatments. This is with the many conventional dynamic speakers I have had in here. Most folks marvel at the bass and even tonal balance.Refreshing change from my apt in Manhattan were everything sounded like doody...no matter what I did! John,It didn't all sound like doody when you were in Manhattan.I can remember many listening sessions that sounded very good (especially when we were spinning vinyl).George
It's the start of a review and the reviewer wanted people to know that even early on, it sounds like something special. He obviously wants to wait until they fully break in to do the full review.
Quote from: mca on 6 Jul 2008, 01:39 amIt's the start of a review and the reviewer wanted people to know that even early on, it sounds like something special. He obviously wants to wait until they fully break in to do the full review. I think the full review after break in will indeed be very special...Judging from what I hear in my own system, the CS-2's continue to get better with some serious time logged. I believe that previous owners just didn't give them enough time and/or did not/cannot optimize placement within the room. It literally took over 500 hours of time logged to hear how special these are. Any baffle resonance's or driver break-in gremlins have completely disappeared. Although they do sound exceptionally good cold out of the box especially in comparison to other hi end speakers...they blossom tremendously after full break in. Patience is well rewarded.The question was also asked if they have the dynamic ability to thump you in the chest....Zybar's experience is a bit different than mine in that regard. While they do not push air like some of the huge box , crazy expensive, or ultra sensitive horn speakers designed for sound re-enforcement, they can come close in that regard. With my Nuforce 9.02 on bottom at over 300W/4 ohm and a balanced Rawson Gainclone at 100W on top, I have huge dynamics in my room at 9' from the speakers. The Sheffield Track and Drum on FIM XRCD 24 CD, puts the drums in my room so well with a bit of tweaking on the dcx...Its scary good! It would probably take much more power..say 1000W on bottom and a bit more on top to push air that hits you in your seat, but I believe that the CS-2's could do it and are capable of of it.