0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 3251 times.
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1130669The issue in that thread kind of came down to whether the ST's could hit a 105 dB peak at 12 feet with normal amplification. One dude was contending that no speaker can do that unless its sensitivity is at least 94 dB. And then there was discussion about whether sensitivity specs were reliable in the first place. I don't think anyone actually commented on whether the ST's could hit 105 dB at 12 feet on a peak. I'm not sure I would know 105 dB if I heard it, or whether it would be the last thing I ever heard.
. . . Below are a few pics (yes, I know the tweeters should be on the inside). . . .
Quote from: zybar on 20 Mar 2009, 12:51 pm. . . Below are a few pics (yes, I know the tweeters should be on the inside). . . .You probably expected this question: why aren't the L/R tweeters on the inside as recommended by Salk?
When listening at lower volume levels I do need to occasionaly raise the gain on the center channel so the dialogue does not become overshadowed by the other channels. This is not an issue at normal volumes and power levels.
P.S. The ST's are great for home theater. When placed in a very large room, however, they may not fill it to everyone's content. This, of course, should be obvious to most people. There is only so much the small 5" drivers can do.
Quote from: Crackinjahcs on 20 Mar 2009, 06:19 pmWhen listening at lower volume levels I do need to occasionaly raise the gain on the center channel so the dialogue does not become overshadowed by the other channels. This is not an issue at normal volumes and power levels.Do you have all the channels level matched? If so, the center shouldn't be overpowered by the other channels.
Personally, I like timbre accuracy, and an out of whack HF response is not going to give me that. I also need my HT speakers to pull double duty for 2.1 music, so I will always chose a speaker that can handle music with ease first, HT second. YMMV, of course.