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See that! Before ya know it we'll be tippin beers together, clasping hands and singing Kum-bay-a!
Blessing in disguise since I had a "paradigm shift" moment afterwards.
I was pretty disappointed in the ZYX Airy3 MC phono cartridge I tried. It sounded pretty lifeless to me.--Jerome
I am now a self-taught expert in recording and playing back cymbals, having wielded an 18" pair of concert "crash" cymbals during our live-vs-recorded CES demos in 2009 and 2010.It is my opinion, based on this experience, that cymbals excite in and out of band digital artifacts in the Redbook CD recording process. I say that because no recorded cymbals I have in my extensive RBCD collection sound like the live pair. Strangely, the recorded cymbals lack the metallic 1kHz to 3kHz fundamentals which predominate when heard close up, exhibiting instead much more HF overtones and non-harmonically related hash and noise than the real thing. We recorded this year in both 24/88.2 and 5.6 Mhz DSD and both recordings sounded much closer to live than any Redbook playback I can find. DSD sounded definitely sweeter, smoother, and more extended to my ears than hi-rez, heard directly off the hard drives of our Korg and Alesis recorders in instant A/B comparison.The speakers we employed had ribbon tweeter arrays good to about 40kHz, I might add. There was no substantial difference between live cymbals vs. recorded to be heard in our demo, held in a 28x32x9ft ballroom with about 30 listeners on hand.B CheneyVMPS ribbonwww.vmpsaudio.com
I have to agree, I used the high output Silver Airy3 and just did'nt enjoy it. Nothing wrong with it I am sure, others think it is wonderful. I found it detailed and accurate, but lacking the life and dynamics, I found in the benz Micro LP, I replaced it with. My biggest failure was Townsend Supertweeters. I could'nt hear any difference whatsover. Probably my ageing cloth ears. Luckily the company is an excellent one and they gave me a full refund
There is life up there. http://www.cco.caltech.edu/~boyk/spectra/spectra.htmand a plausible reason to reproduce it: http://jn.physiology.org/cgi/content/full/83/6/3548That said. You better have either a great analog source or high def digital source and wide band amplifier to make it worth your while. Also this is where your cables may need some real engineering. Some amps can have issues oscillating in this frequency range. This is one area where transmission line theory may be applicable to audio. Cool http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=59717.0Dan
Do you think this phenomenon has something to do with the recording industry having no standard on how to properly place microphones when recording instruments (such as cymbals and drums)? Sounds like, based on your experience, you determined the proper way to do it, at least to your ears. So might I ask, how did you accomplish it? Did you use special mics, or a variety of placements? It would seem the recording industry could learn a thing or two about your techniques.
Sam Tellig AR RCA Interconnect cables!
Russell,I remember reading somewhere that in a 16 bit system -60dB corresponds to 3% THD,can you confirm this?Scotty