0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 31587 times.
I agree, although I'd also add in the listening room and the recording as being extremely important too.
Agreed, though I'm obviously biased with the room. I'll take a moderate system in a proper room and set up right over a really nice system in a room that has issues any day. That said, the speaker and the room have to work together. Maggie MG20's aren't going to work in a 10x12 bedroom. LS3/5A's aren't going to work in a 24x30 room with a 12' ceiling. Getting the room right and getting speakers that work well within that room is the key IMO. Then you can start looking at other things.Bryan
YEs, avoid the macho Im going to have a 20 driver behemoth speaker in a 10 x 12 room. Yes its very many, but will most likely sound like crap.
LS3/5A's aren't going to work in a 24x30 room with a 12' ceiling.
I always laughed at Pearson at The Absolute Sound going into raptures about all these huge speakers that he stuffed into his tiny listening room. From what I've heard Fremer still does this.
I have been at HPs home and the room is NOT small. Now the Maggie room is a small med sixed room which measures dead flat. The large room is at least 16 ft wide and about 28 ft long. Plenty of room for the big boys. BTW if you ever hear the big system you will appreciate his efforts a bit more IMO. charles
My listening room isn't by any means enormous, but my somewhat large Gedlee Abbeys work great...the design intent helps them to work better in real rooms and this is something more people need to consider. Also, using several subs...in ANY system will make for better sound. Speakers only having to handle 50-60hz and up will normally sound better and react better within the room. It also helps to raise the system efficiency in most cases.Electonics make a difference but a very small one comparatively...I do think it's funny how people can spend enormous amounts on amps and sources for speaker systems that have serious flaws. The speaker world is 99% marketing gimmicks....finding the good ones are difficult.
Electonics make a difference but a very small one comparatively...I do think it's funny how people can spend enormous amounts on amps and sources for speaker systems that have serious flaws. The speaker world is 99% marketing gimmicks....finding the good ones are difficult.
Sometimes, electronics can make a HUGE difference. Three specific cases, two involving single full range driver speakers that I built and a two-way OB:1) Half Changs with Fostex FE206e: I built them for our daughter and son-in-law. I delivered them with a little Radio Shack Accurian amp (re-purposed, on sale for $15, 25 wpc.) The combo produced a horrible screechy sibilance, despite working reasonably well with several other two-way speakers.. Switching to a RS AVR I had given them earlier (obtained for free), resulted in acceptable (but not great) performance.2) Metronomes with Fostex F120a: driven with SS amps (several different ones tried incl. vintage and current), these have truly mediocre performance with weak, sickly highs. Switching to tubes results in gorgeous sound. 3) MJK OB using Fostex FF85k and Eminence Alpha 15a w/ passive XO: sound wonderful w/ SS amps. Switching to the MiniWatt tube amp I bought for the F120a Mets results in loose, flabby bass.There really are speaker/amp combos which are substandard!Cheers, Jim
I wanted to bring up a point in reverse: Poor speakers can make a good amp/preamp/source sound terrible. I 100% agree that the room has allot to do with how a setup performs. People talk about room treatments as a way to resolve some issues- sounds like a good plan! I never liked low efficiency speakers even if they sound good. I have heard some are easier to drive than others, probably based on their cabinetry and crossover network. The knowledge that the amp's effort is just going up in heat instead of sound is troubling when speakers are down in the upper to lower 80's. They limit the kind of amps that can be tried. What good is that?