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My point is that people who are talking about "accuracy" are talking out of their @ss...
They also exist cause many in this hobby are insecure and anxiety ridden, and desperately wanna believe that the next doo-dad and bit of snake oil will take them to the promised land. And mfrs / sellers take advantage of this.Hey....I'm a free market capitalist, so I don't really blame the folks on the sell side. I blame the idiots that pay the insane prices and therefore support and encourage the smoke and mirrors industry.
I believe a powered sub would have fixed the 'awful' part, but I don't like powered subs much.
Unpowered subs, on the other hand add absolutely no distortion, which is a distinct advantage over the powered variety. The sound is very clear and precise.
you are joking - am I right?
Yes.If you do not power your sub, I promise it will be clean and distortion-free.
Perhaps some people have a different idea than you do as to what constitutes accuracy?? If you were a professional recording engineer, I think you'd laugh at the simplicity of your above statement.
Hi - I apologize that I haven't actually read this whole thread... however I would like to relate a recent gathering I attended where a recording engineer arranged a session in which he recorded a singer and guitarist in a studio with a small number of audio enthusiasts in attendance. The recording was done using the Blumleim (mid-side) technique. The eye-opening thing here was... there is no such thing as "accurate." For example, while the engineer was previewing the sound on his Nagra recorder, he moved his position and the coincident mic to obtain what he thought was the best balance of direct and ambient sound. He asked the singer to move back further behind the guitarist according to the nature of the song. He moved the microphone up or down to get the right balance of voice and guitar sound. Then when he was satisfied that he understood the nature of this recording, he asked us (the audience in the studio) to be absolutely quiet and then asked the performers to record the track. Later on in the mixing studio he experimented with the mix of direct-to-ambient audio from the microphones while deciding on the final "mix." He also related stories about other recordings he had done recently where he had used microphones closer to the performers and added additional microphones/tracks to capture the room ambience, which he had then decided upon during final mixdown as to what constituted what felt, to him, to convey the best impression of the performance.ThanksJohnR
The question: "If I go from tube to solid state or visa-versa, or a hybrid system, etc... will it help me?" Can't be readily answered until speaker and room issues are looked into first. It is important to become very intimate with your speakers and room in terms of their abilities/inabilities. What I am getting at is this: I learned the speaker's limitations. The toe-in, height and listening position were perfect. There are things those speakers can't and won't do. Different amps, preamps, etc... will change things a little but not allot.
Sound waves:1. Have to be captured mechanically2. The pickup sends an electronic signal3. That signal is amplified and/or recorded4. The recorded signal is re-amplified via a preamp & amp5. The re-amplified signal is then distributed to your speakersThe mechanical pickup interface is never going to be accurate nor reiterate what anybody in the audience actually hears: The microphones will have a different perspective than your ears. End of story right there. Add that issue to the accuracy of the microphones, which are not always that accurate. I 100% agree the original performance cannot be accurately reproduced into your listening room. But: I actually do not care about the entire process. Those responsible for recording have their job, we have ours. We as consumers are only interested in replicating the recorded sound. The only reference you should be concerned about is how close your system can reproduce what is on the playback medium and not the recording studio. You and I have zero control over mic placements, their room acoustics, etc... No control = I don't care and can't care. It's a done deal. Plan a system that sounds good to you and you alone. Faithful reproduction only extends to the playback end for us. Not the recording end. I want my system to be able to extract all the information it can from a recording and do it accurately.