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You fellas might find this useful.It's a very nice interactive frequency chart. Keep an eye on the "Ear Sensitivity" chart on the lower left while hovering the mouse over the larger chart. Also, click that same small chart to see where our ears are weakest compared to test equipment.Hope that helps.Bob
Greg, I believe the first time you heard Salk speakers was when I demo'ed my Song Towers for you about a year and a half ago. At that time we discussed your room and you and I agreed that you could spend a boat load of money on speakers and yet still not get the sound you were craving because of room issues. It sounds to me as though you are coming to terms with that fundamental truth.To me, a speaker system includes both the loudspeaker and the room. Unfortunately, when you commit to a speaker like the HT3, you also commit to optimizing the room. You simply cannot do one with out the other and expect to realize the HT3's capabilities.I will also comment that my Song Towers are at their best at volume levels which are not sustainable for long periods of time due to neighbor issues. The Song Towers like to be cranked up: at lower volumes they sound very good, but not great. Again, my system, my room: YMMV.
Dennis, any lack of bass that I am experiencing is strictly at LOW volumes. Not at all close to what I would consider normal listening levels, if I had my way. My experience matches almost exactly with the charts that can be found in the link that Jim posted to the article about the "loudness button," and the chart that Bob posted. I am perfectly happy with the bass response when I am able to turn it up a little, it is by no means shy once I get past a certain volume. I was hesitant to even post anything about this because it is really kind of silly for me to be picky about the bass response at extremely polite volume. Get out of the corner, I'm sold on the limitations of my hearing.Cheers,Greg
I'm not sure everyone was picking up on the context of your remarks. All that matters is what you hear at what you consider normal listening levels. I don't have any sound treatments in any of my listening rooms, and while I'm sure they could help, you should be able to achieve enjoyable results in most rooms without sound treatment panels. But there are condiditons (like oneinthepipe's listening area) where I'm sure they make the difference between acceptable and not acceptable.
I agree with everything you're saying. I'm only maintaining that the HT3's should not sound bass shy under most any normal condition. You've got one honking room peak down there around 40 Hz. I think equalization is the only solution, as you've discovered. Dips between 100 and 150 hz are due to floor bounce cancellation, which will always be there on any speaker unless the woofer is smack against the floor.
You both just echoed what I told funk yesterday in a PM. So there you have it Greg; the experts (not me) have spoken. Now go download REW, get an SPL meter and start taking measurements.
a lot of current cds have the volume cranked up - compressed and much less dynamic range. When you play at low volumes that limited dynamic range reflects in hearing less low end (the phenomenon Jim suggested)