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Hi,I thought the frequency range of human hearing is from 20Hz - 20KHz?
I would add that I had a spot between 16.5-17.5khz I think where I could not hear anything. Also I don't have any idea how accurate the equipment they use is.
Do you plan on an aluminum Abbey to match your current subs?
Bear - why the sarchasm?
If you don't mind, may I ask what your current system consists of?
I think that is a common misunderstanding. It is extrmeley rare, even in young people, to find someone with hearing (by this I mean within 6 dB of flat) to 20 kHz. By the time you are 40 thats dropped to a likely max of about 10 kHz. But all of that aside, studies have shown that few people will detect a LP filter at about 8-10 kHz. In nature anything above about 8 kHz is attenuated at a very high rate with distance. This means that there is very little in nature above these frequencies and so there would be very little natural reinforcement for our hearing to develop that high. Smaller animals (cats, mice), that operate on much shorter distance scales, have very highly developed hearing above 10 kHz. But we don't. The fact is that frequencies above 10 Khz really have almost nothing to do with sound quality.
Ya know jwtrace, in some cases, things just really are better That's the case with the Abbeys, they really are better than most anything out there. I'm amazed that they are so inexpensive, honestly.
I don't know about that range for over 40; I'm over 40 and my hearing didn't test that poorly. On the other hand, my niece had a telephone "ring" that was a high frequency, and I had to be within a few feet of the phone to hear it, while our 2 yo old daughter and niece could hear it from many feet away.As for the tour, I have to admit that I wouldn't buy these speakers unless I heard them first. I've never heard small speakers that come close to full range. Plus, having to buy 3-4 subs -- and spending the time to tune them -- means that the speakers would have to be stellar. I have two subs and don't have the time to tune both of them, let alone tune another 1-2 subs. These speakers have so many positive reviews that I'd consider them, but having to fork out 6k just to try them isn't what I'd like to do.
A big NO. Mac Mini with Amarra (8GB RAM & SSD) > Wavelength Crimson (Denominator) > Dodd Buffer > Ashly 3.24CL (active crossover) > Copland DRC > Clayton M-300 > my diy'er 3 way (Scan Speak woofer, Accuton C-79 mid with Fountek Ribbon) with two Rythmik subs. All DH Labs Revelation interconnects, Q-10 speaker wire and DH Power cords. All powered using the PI Audio MuthaBuss which is powered from a dedicated line. And most importantly room treatments by GIK.
Jason, Anad made a statement that it is a first row presentation. Is the sound forward say in front of the speaker plane ? Does the soudstage have any depth ? Image size meaning life sized. Was the presentation thin or dry ? Rich ? Was there controlled sibilance with female and male vocals ? Was the top end crisp or natural ? I know an in home demo with my gear will be the only true test. A general discription of the questions would be appreciated.thankscharles
Jason, Anad made a statement that it is a first row presentation. Is the sound forward say in front of the speaker plane ? Does the soudstage have any depth ? Image size meaning life sized. Was the presentation thin or dry ? Rich ? Was there controlled sibilance with female and male vocals ? Was the top end crisp or natural ? I know an in home demo with my gear will be the only true test. A general discription of the questions would be appreciated.thankscharlesCharles,
With the caveat that Jason has stated numerous times writing is not his first passion (I think he does quite well