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......................Live music venues bear little if any relationship to stereo & MC. Both are artifices & poor ones @ that.
My system is not out of phase
Just checking. What test or procedures have you performed to make sure your system is not out of phase? If you have not played a phase test recording you could be guessing. Just a thought.Ric
Phase test recording?You don't need a special recording to hear it. You just play some music and flip the phase on one speaker. One way will give more bass than the other.
Not all recordings are in phase to begin with. Any number of things can go wrong during the recording stage from mic placement to signal flow errors in patching sends and returns and even at the stereo bus. This isn't talked about much but the issue has become large enough that now many control rooms are fitted with phase scopes that can be handily viewed from the console. It is the reason in fact that some manufacturers have a phase switch and not so much because the particular piece of equipment might be mated to another whose polarity is inverted.Just thought you guys might like to know.
I actually use a Sunfire TG4 processor that has Bob Carver's Holography imaging, works great on both stereo and multichannel.
I have a Carver C-9 Sonic Holography Generator. It basically works by feeding some of the L signal into the R speaker and vice versa to reduce crosstalk. If done exactly right, the crosstalk cancels out at your ear. There was also a system called M.A.R.S. that did much the same thing in the speaker itself. Polk had something similar too.In all cases, the method used for the solutions is less complex than the original problem, and winds up not completely solving it.I've had my C-9 for about 30 years, IIRC. I take it out once in a while and play with it. It will make a couple of recordings at one listening position sound great (just don't move your head at all!), but then it makes other recordings sound worse. I always wind up putting it back in the closet.You can do almost the same thing if you put some acoustic foam like Sonex as a barrier between the speakers. I mounted some on a hat. It looked really weird, but it worked as well as the Carver method. Unfortunately, it blocks a basic part of your hearing mechanism, the filtering you get from your head, the head-related transfer function (HRTF). So it still only works on some recordings and makes others sound worse. (Headphones have the same problem.)I've also come to wonder whether crosstalk is really a major problem. Logically it is a fundamental flaw of stereo speakers. An event in the concert hall produces two events, one in each channel or the stereo recording. No problem so far, the same thing happens with your ears. Then you play it back and the one initial event becomes four events.The question I would ask is whether it really makes a difference? Is it really a major problem, or only a minor one?I'm coming to think it's only a minor problem, and the available cures are worse then the disease.
Being your C-9 is 30 years old and my Sunfire is only 5-6 years old, I'm sure their were advances made to the Holographic design. When used in stereo mode, the highs are