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Default Is flat frequency response desirable?

On Apr 12, 2:48*pm, Sonnova wrote:
Why propagate mythology?


Because for some in the high-end audio biz, it's
their only added value.


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On Apr 12, 2:48*pm, Sonnova wrote:

Yet I have seen speakers where the
manufacturer's instructions tell the new owner that the speaker won't sound
its best until AFTER a 100 hrs or so of break-in. Why propagate mythology?


To discourage returns.

bob
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On Apr 12, 4:06*pm, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in ...
It comes from placing dipoles or omnies close to the back wall.


OK now this is getting really frustrating. Where did "placing dipoles or
omnis close to the back wall" come from?

Gary Eickmeier


Sorry about your frustration. It came from the 9th post on this
thread.

"This is exactly opposite of the truth. Speakers that are flat to a
measuring
microphone in an anechoic chamber will have a natural, desirable fall-
off of
the high frequencies in a good sized room, as will live instruments.
This is
provided they have a very wide, even radiation pattern, preferably
dipole or
omni, and are placed a few feet from all walls."

I stand corrected. You weren't limiting the close placement to the
back wall. You seem to want to splash the sound off the side walls as
well. As an owner of curved dipoles I instinctively ignored the side
wall part of your comment.

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"Sonnova" wrote in message


I have seen speakers
where the manufacturer's instructions tell the new owner
that the speaker won't sound its best until AFTER a 100
hrs or so of break-in. Why propagate mythology?


Same reason that some speaker manufacturers put bi-wiring terminals on their
speakers. It's what the client associate with a higher quality product.


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On Apr 12, 10:32*pm, wrote:
On Apr 12, 2:48*pm, Sonnova wrote:

Yet I have seen speakers where the
manufacturer's instructions tell the new owner that the speaker won't sound
its best until AFTER a 100 hrs or so of break-in. Why propagate mythology?


To discourage returns.

Not in my experience. Allow a small trade-in on a return, sell the
item to another customer. Then sell the original customer a
replacement item. Isn't that what keeps them in business?

bob





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On Apr 12, 4:07*pm, John Stone wrote:
On 4/11/09 1:06 PM, in article ,

" wrote:
On Apr 11, 3:20*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in message
"Splashed all over the walls"? Where did that come from?


Gary Eickmeier- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


It comes from placing dipoles or omnies close to the back wall.


Ok, so misplacing dipoles and omni's causes problems. That's a given. But
poorly placed monopole speakers will also cause problems, and they too
"splash sound all over the walls", just in a different manner. So is the
solution to not splash sound all over the walls, or for the walls to
completely absorb that sound? You wouldn't think so if you've ever heard a
pair of speakers played in an anechoic chamber.


I have not heard a pair of speakers in an anechoic chamber so I can't
comment on that experience first hand. OTOH I have heard many people
talk about how bad the sound is in an anechoic chamber without
actually listening to speakers in an anechoic chamber. I have also
heard from one source that near field listening in an anechoic chamber
was the best stereo sound he has ever heard.
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wrote in message

On Apr 12, 10:32 pm, wrote:
On Apr 12, 2:48 pm, Sonnova
wrote:

Yet I have seen speakers where the
manufacturer's instructions tell the new owner that the
speaker won't sound its best until AFTER a 100 hrs or
so of break-in. Why propagate mythology?


To discourage returns.


Not in my experience. Allow a small trade-in on a return,
sell the item to another customer.


I'm a dealer of sorts, and that scares the %$#! out of me. I want the
things I see to stay sold for at least a year.

Then sell the original customer a replacement item. Isn't that what keeps
them
in business?


One key to churning gullible clients is to maximize the spread between
selling and buying prices. That requires that the customer feel guilty about
his time with the equipment in question.

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wrote in message
...
On Apr 12, 4:06 pm, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:


and are placed a few feet from all walls."

I stand corrected. You weren't limiting the close placement to the
back wall. You seem to want to splash the sound off the side walls as
well. As an owner of curved dipoles I instinctively ignored the side
wall part of your comment.


You also ignored the "a few feet from" part. Does that translate to "close
to" in your mind?

The "splashing" is your term as well, and I have never referred to the front
wall of a listening room as "the back wall."

I'm curious about your attitude - as an owner of dipoles, why are you so
against "splashing" the sound off the walls? Why wouldn't you own corner
horns? And how do you position your speakers? Close to the walls or a few
feet from all walls?

Gary Eickmeier


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On Apr 11, 5:17*pm, wrote:
On Apr 11, 2:13*pm, wrote:

Well, if a flat frequency response is not desirable,
then the program material must need some help. *


Hardly the only possibility. Basically, it's because
the listener has an expectation of what it SHOULD
sound like, and the presentation needs to be adjusted
to meet that expectation. That includes all sorts of
possibilities, including program material needing
help, the listeners expectations at variance with
some reality and so forth.


This is my own opinion, offered from my own perspective. This is
offered from my audio purist point of view. This is a high end audio
newsgroup. Are we not interested in achieveing as accurate audio
reproduction as possible?

Please note however, I don't have any issue with any listener
twiddling tone controls in any way to satisfy whatever reason or
quibble they have. Sometimes, it may even be to correct the tonal
balance to more accurately represent the source material, if the
source material needs help.

If all aspects of the recording are respected to
their true source dimensions, there would be
no need to alter frequency response.


Simple not true: you assume that a neutral,
uncolored presentation is the ONLY correct one
for all listeners.


Exactly where, or when did I decree that a neutral, uncolored
presentation is the ONLY correct one for ALL listeners? I expressed a
personal opinion regarding MY preference in reproduction. I did not,
and would not evangelise my preferences for accuracy as a panacea for
all listeners. Most listeners could care a whit about accuracy to the
source material. They mostly want to hear their audio the way they
want it without much regard to fidelity. I do not fault anyone for
their own preferences either.

On the other hand, if we are discussing the accuracy of audio
reproduction, then frequency response that mimics the source material
is likely preferable.

Frequency response of a speaker system within
a given listening room is important to accuracy,


Again, your premise assumes that a clear definition
of accuracy is agreed upon and the result is accepted
by all. It is not.


A clear definition of accuracy does not need to be agreed upon. It
either is, or is not. Consensus may be reassuring, but it is not
necessary. Belief that a reproduced audio portrayal has great
fidelity to the original audio recorded is a personal discovery. Some
listeners may believe accurate what others may not. However, not many
listeners really compare live audio experiences with reproduced. Some
listen carefully, some don't. This doesn't matter as long as
individually, we all are enjoying and/or satisfied with the results.

Again, my statement is relevant to my own opinion, and that alone. I
am not satisfied with skewed frequency response in audio
reproduction. But as my original post said, frequency response is
important, but not always the most important factor.

Playback of good quality signal at actual
performance SPL should not require any major
equalization corrections to sound accurate.


Again, you assume that a. everyone agrees upon the
same definition of "accuracy" and b. everyone agrees
that accuracy is THE goal.


This is ignoring the previous paragraph in my post that hinted upon
the Fletcher-Munson tonal balance contours that compensate for audio
sounding generally light in bass when played at less than performance
sound levels. This may be a good point of discussion regarding the
OP's predispostition for bass heavy reproduction.

You missed the point there, and again, I do not wish to beat the
accuracy quest to death at this point. That is my opinion and an
opinion shared by many (but not all) audiophile types.

This depends upon the room and speakers being
matched and complementary to enable a good
stereo image and void of objectionable resonance or
standing waves.


In a word, no. Among other things, you're assuming
that response magnitude is he only variable. It most
assuredly is not. The fact is that a standing wave in
a room can well be a non-mininum phase error, and
attempting to correct it with a non-minimum phase
speaker response or a different non-minimum phase
response will not work. Simply put: a complimentary
speaker response to a room error is complimentary
ONLY in one domain, (response magnitude vs
frequency) and is NOT other, equally critical domans
(e.g. phase of time vs frequency).


Where did all that come from? How do you know what I am assuming? Why
do you make assumptions and extrapolate meanings to suit your train of
thought? It seems you are attempting to steer the content of my post
on a tangent, far away from it's intended course. It is also
inconsiderate to present your rationalizations in a sanctimonious and
marginalising manner.

Sheesh! You know, perhaps I was talking about thoughtful listening
room renovation, room treatment and optimal speaker positioning. At
least that is what I thought I was talking about. I regret not being
absolutely concise enough to contain your imagination.

Where is this going? *I've had this deja vu before with this same
debate on the horizon. *This has been beat to death without an
objective winner.


Often time, by being clubbed to death by quite
non-objective or just plain "technical" wrong
arguments.


Let's maybe say that we agree to disagree regarding accuracy. In most
cases I strive for the reproduction to be as close in fidelity to the
source material as possible. If we say that deviating from that ideal
purposely because some listeners "like it that way", then that may be
correct for their sensibilities or expectations, but purposely
incorrect to the source, it is therefore not really attempting to be
accurate. Perhaps pleasing to some though.

However, as long as all the listeners are content with their choices
and preferences at the end of the day then I say THAT is the best
result, regardless of accuracy.

Aaaarrrgh,
Don

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On Apr 13, 2:37*pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
wrote in message



On Apr 12, 10:32 pm, wrote:
On Apr 12, 2:48 pm, Sonnova
wrote:


Yet I have seen speakers where the
manufacturer's instructions tell the new owner that the
speaker won't sound its best until AFTER a 100 hrs or
so of break-in. Why propagate mythology?


To discourage returns.


Not in my experience. Allow a small trade-in on a return,
sell the item to another customer.


I'm a dealer of sorts, and that scares the %$#! out of me. *I want the
things I see to stay sold for at least a year.


Money does make the world go round, or at least that's what I've
heard. My high end dealer (and I'm not naming names) did that all the
time. Some of the times I was a buyer, and others trading it in for
the "new and improved" version, which is a never ceasing event.

Then sell the original customer a replacement item. Isn't that what keeps
them
in business?


One key to churning gullible clients is to maximize the spread between
selling and buying prices. That requires that the customer feel guilty about
his time with the equipment in question.


Why is that? no true if a customer very badly wants to get rid of
something after an unsuccessful audition in his home. I'm of the
opinion that a customer (who supposedly is always right) only feels
guilty about money spent unwisely, sometimes both true and of his own
doing, others because of what he's lead to believe by a high end
"rag", and yet others at the dealer's recommendation.


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On Apr 14, 3:06*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in message

...

On Apr 12, 4:06 pm, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
and are placed a few feet from all walls."


I stand corrected. You weren't limiting the close placement to the
back wall. You seem to want to splash the sound off the side walls as
well. As an owner of curved dipoles I instinctively ignored the side
wall part of your comment.


You also ignored the "a few feet from" part.


Quite the opposite.

Does that translate to "close
to" in your mind?


Yes.

The "splashing" is your term as well, and I have never referred to the front
wall of a listening room as "the back wall."


We are talking about dipoles and we are talking about the wall
*behind* them. I'm sure we understood each other about which wall was
being discussed.


I'm curious about your attitude


I do not mean to project any sort of attitude. Sorry if I come across
that way.

- as an owner of dipoles, why are you so
against "splashing" the sound off the walls?


Because it severely damages the sound quality.

Why wouldn't you own corner
horns?


I haven't heard any that compete with my Sound Labs for creating a
realistic illusion of live music.

And how do you position your speakers? Close to the walls or a few
feet from all walls?


Niether. My speakers are about seven feet from the back (front) wall.
They are rather close to the side walls but the side wall reflections
are delt with by sound absorbtion from behind the speakers and a
physical blocking of the early reflection points infront of the
speakers and by the shape of the speakers themselves. My back (front)
wall is heavily covered in absorbtion materials. My listening position
is about 7 1/2 feet from the front of the speakers (near field) the
rest of the room is heavily treated with absorbtion and diffusion.

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wrote in message


One key to churning gullible clients is to maximize the
spread between selling and buying prices. That requires
that the customer feel guilty about his time with the
equipment in question.


Why is that?


Basic economics: Buy low, sell high.

not true if a customer very badly wants to
get rid of something after an unsuccessful audition in
his home.


Why wasn't the audition part of a pre-arranged trial?

Most of the dealers around here offer free 30 day trials, etc.

I'm of the opinion that a customer (who
supposedly is always right) only feels guilty about money
spent unwisely, sometimes both true and of his own doing,
others because of what he's lead to believe by a high end
"rag", and yet others at the dealer's recommendation.


Seems like a truism. Dealer's and manufacturer's invented the "break in"
myth to help them manage that situation.


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On Apr 15, 10:25*am, wrote:
On Apr 14, 3:06*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
And how do you position your speakers?
Close to the walls or a few feet from all walls?


Niether. My speakers are about seven feet from
the back (front) wall. They are rather close to the
side walls but the side wall reflections are delt with
by sound absorbtion from behind the speakers and a
physical blocking of the early reflection points infront
of the speakers and by the shape of the speakers
themselves.


Just so everyone is on the same page, it's important
to note that the if these speakers are even approximations
of dipole radiators, the radiation normal to the principle
axis is seriously reduced over a wide band of frequencies,
making the side reflections much less of a problem
with dipoles.


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On 4/15/09 9:25 AM, in article ,
" wrote:

On Apr 14, 3:06*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:


- as an owner of dipoles, why are you so
against "splashing" the sound off the walls?


Because it severely damages the sound quality.

Here is an article from someone who knows a thing or two about dipole
loudspeakers, that takes the completely opposite view.

http://linkwitzlab.com/stereo%20reproduction.htm

or the AES paper, if you want to go into further detail

http://linkwitzlab.com/AES'07/AES123-final2.pdf

And how do you position your speakers? Close to the walls or a few
feet from all walls?


Niether. My speakers are about seven feet from the back (front) wall.
They are rather close to the side walls but the side wall reflections
are delt with by sound absorbtion from behind the speakers and a
physical blocking of the early reflection points infront of the
speakers and by the shape of the speakers themselves. My back (front)
wall is heavily covered in absorbtion materials. My listening position
is about 7 1/2 feet from the front of the speakers (near field) the
rest of the room is heavily treated with absorbtion and diffusion.


You definitely seem to be in the "reflections are evil" camp. Getting back
to that anechoic chamber discussion, is your goal to eliminate as much
reflected energy as possible? Or do you consider some room contribution to
be acceptable, even desirable?
Your selection of dipole speakers is also interesting given your statement
that sound reflected off the walls is damaging to the quality.

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Thank you for your very complete response to my probing questions. I will
try to do it justice.

wrote in message ...
On Apr 14, 3:06 am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:


The "splashing" is your term as well, and I have never referred to the
front
wall of a listening room as "the back wall."


We are talking about dipoles and we are talking about the wall
*behind* them. I'm sure we understood each other about which wall was
being discussed.


Yes, but sometimes we need to also talk about the actual back wall, and it
gets confusing if you are not consistent.


I'm curious about your attitude


I do not mean to project any sort of attitude. Sorry if I come across
that way.


Attitude is not a good or bad thing, I was just saying that your "tilt" is
toward wanting to minimize all reflections, but then you go and get dipolar
speakers.

And how do you position your speakers? Close to the walls or a few
feet from all walls?


Niether. My speakers are about seven feet from the back (front) wall.
They are rather close to the side walls but the side wall reflections
are delt with by sound absorbtion from behind the speakers and a
physical blocking of the early reflection points infront of the
speakers and by the shape of the speakers themselves. My back (front)
wall is heavily covered in absorbtion materials. My listening position
is about 7 1/2 feet from the front of the speakers (near field) the
rest of the room is heavily treated with absorbtion and diffusion.


Again, the main advantage of dipoles is that the reflected sound from behind
them can contribute a depth and spaciousness that is not available with
direct firing speakers - if you will let them.

To cut a long story off at the knees, I do just the opposite of what your
goal seems to be. My placement is 1/4 of the room width out from the front
wall and the same distance from the side walls, so that if you draw an
"image model" of the actual speakers and all of their reflections you see 8
evenly spaced sound sources locked in an array in front of you. A summing
localization makes the apparent left and right sound sources completely
outside of the speaker boxes, somewhere behind and a little wider than the
actual speakers. Because the front and side walls are being used in
constructing the stereo illusion, they literally disappear as "problem"
reflections and behave as though they were transparent and you are listening
to eight actual speakers arrayed in depth and width in front of you.
Close-miked, dry recordings sound like they are right in your room with you,
and wetter, more spacious recordings sound very spacious, modeling the
playback after the actual reflection patterns in the hall.

That's the Cliff Notes version of the results I am getting with the
completely different approach from yours. I think you are depriving yourself
of some enjoyable aspects of your Martin Logans by killing all reflections
like that.

Gary Eickmeier



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On Apr 15, 10:01*pm, "Gary Eickmeier"
wrote:
Thank you for your very complete response to my probing questions. I will
try to do it justice.

wrote in ...
On Apr 14, 3:06 am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
The "splashing" is your term as well, and I have never referred to the
front
wall of a listening room as "the back wall."


We are talking about dipoles and we are talking about the wall
*behind* them. I'm sure we understood each other about which wall was
being discussed.


Yes, but sometimes we need to also talk about the actual back wall, and it
gets confusing if you are not consistent.


I'll try to keep my front and back wall straight from here on out.




I'm curious about your attitude


I do not mean to project any sort of attitude. Sorry if I come across
that way.


Attitude is not a good or bad thing, I was just saying that your "tilt" is
toward wanting to minimize all reflections, but then you go and get dipolar
speakers.


More to the point. Electrostatic speakers. The dipole thing is just an
unfortunate by-product.


And how do you position your speakers? Close to the walls or a few
feet from all walls?


Niether. My speakers are about seven feet from the back (front) wall.
They are rather close to the side walls but the side wall reflections
are delt with by sound absorbtion from behind the speakers and a
physical blocking of the early reflection points infront of the
speakers and by the shape of the speakers themselves. My back (front)
wall is heavily covered in absorbtion materials. My listening position
is about 7 1/2 feet from the front of the speakers (near field) the
rest of the room is heavily treated with absorbtion and diffusion.


Again, the main advantage of dipoles is that the reflected sound from behind
them can contribute a depth and spaciousness that is not available with
direct firing speakers - if you will let them.


IME I get a much greater illusion of depth, width and height with less
room interaction. Not to mention no smearing. With the right program
material the illusion is quite uncanny.


To cut a long story off at the knees, I do just the opposite of what your
goal seems to be. My placement is 1/4 of the room width out from the front
wall and the same distance from the side walls, so that if you draw an
"image model" of the actual speakers and all of their reflections you see 8
evenly spaced sound sources locked in an array in front of you. A summing
localization makes the apparent left and right sound sources completely
outside of the speaker boxes, somewhere behind and a little wider than the
actual speakers. Because the front and side walls are being used in
constructing the stereo illusion, they literally disappear as "problem"
reflections and behave as though they were transparent and you are listening
to eight actual speakers arrayed in depth and width in front of you.
Close-miked, dry recordings sound like they are right in your room with you,
and wetter, more spacious recordings sound very spacious, modeling the
playback after the actual reflection patterns in the hall.


I get that with my arrangement. But what I also get is an amazing
level of transparency. A level that I doubt possible with all those
reflections. You can't help but get substantial smearing in the time
domain with all those direct reflections.


That's the Cliff Notes version of the results I am getting with the
completely different approach from yours. I think you are depriving yourself
of some enjoyable aspects of your Martin Logans by killing all reflections
like that.


I have Sound Labs now. But they are very similar in many ways. But the
"front" wall is a much bigger issue with the Sound Labs than they were
with the Martin Logans. I guess it comes with bigger drivers.

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On Apr 15, 7:16*pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
wrote in message



One key to churning gullible clients is to maximize the
spread between selling and buying prices. That requires
that the customer feel guilty about his time with the
equipment in question.


Why is that?


Basic economics: Buy low, sell high.


Sell high? The most I'm willing to pay is MSRP, and only when I know
it will be backed-up by excellent customer service.

not true if a customer very badly wants to
get rid of something after an unsuccessful audition in
his home.


Why wasn't the audition part of a pre-arranged trial?

Most of the dealers around here offer free 30 day trials, etc.

I think this is unheard of. My dealer would allow me to take something
home, off his display room shelf during that part of the weekend while
he was closed (which I often did). However I had to have it back in
his hands immediately before he opened doors Monday AM. I'd be out of
my mind to ask for some Magneplanar Tympani loudspeakers for a 30 day
home audition.

Most people, and I think I'm typical of most here, want to buy an item
with a "new condition pricetag" in a sealed box. What's he eventually
going to do with that 30 day auditioned item (other than sell them
low)?

I'm of the opinion that a customer (who
supposedly is always right) only feels guilty about money
spent unwisely, sometimes both true and of his own doing,
others because of what he's lead to believe by a high end
"rag", and yet others at the dealer's recommendation.


Seems like a truism. Dealer's and manufacturer's invented the "break in"
myth to help them manage that situation.


If one really doesn't like something, "break in" is not going to make
you like it, and much to the contrary, eventually it's going to grate
on your nerves and make for you to despise it.

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On Apr 15, 5:47*pm, John Stone wrote:
On 4/15/09 9:25 AM, in article ,

" wrote:
On Apr 14, 3:06*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
- as an owner of dipoles, why are you so
against "splashing" the sound off the walls?


Because it severely damages the sound quality.


Here is an article from someone who knows a thing or two about dipole
loudspeakers, that takes the completely opposite view.

http://linkwitzlab.com/stereo%20reproduction.htm

or the AES paper, if you want to go into further detail

http://linkwitzlab.com/AES'07/AES123-final2.pdf

And how do you position your speakers? Close to the walls or a few
feet from all walls?

Niether. My speakers are about seven feet from the back (front) wall.
They are rather close to the side walls but the side wall reflections
are delt with by sound absorbtion from behind the speakers and a
physical blocking of the early reflection points infront of the
speakers and by the shape of the speakers themselves. My back (front)
wall is heavily covered in absorbtion materials. My listening position
is about 7 1/2 feet from the front of the speakers (near field) the
rest of the room is heavily treated with absorbtion and diffusion.


You definitely seem to be in the "reflections are evil" camp. Getting back
to that anechoic chamber discussion, is your goal to eliminate as much
reflected energy as possible?


My goal is to get the best aesthetic sound quality I can. IMO the
standard for that aesthetic is set by live acoustic music played in an
excellent concert hall. I have found so far that the more I deaden the
room and the closer I get to a pure feed directly from the speakers
the better that illusion and the better the aesthetic results. If
there is such a point where the room is actually too dead and starts
to work against my aesthetic goals I have not found it yet. But my
room, as dead as it is, is a pretty far cry from an anechoic chamber.


Or do you consider some room contribution to
be acceptable, even desirable?


Not yet.


Your selection of dipole speakers is also interesting given your statement
that sound reflected off the walls is damaging to the quality.


It is rather incedental that both my old Martin Logans and my current
Sound Labs are dipole. I bought them for their extraordinary
transparency. that transparency is compramised when I put them closer
to the "front" walls and/or when I reduce the amount of sound
absorbing or sound diffusing materials in the room. In short, i chose
both speakers for their exceptional front wave not for their baggage
coming out the rear.


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"John Stone" wrote in message
...
On 4/15/09 9:25 AM, in article ,
" wrote:

On Apr 14, 3:06 am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:


- as an owner of dipoles, why are you so
against "splashing" the sound off the walls?


Because it severely damages the sound quality.

Here is an article from someone who knows a thing or two about dipole
loudspeakers, that takes the completely opposite view.

http://linkwitzlab.com/stereo%20reproduction.htm


Thank you, John, for an interesting read. He is starting to catch on, and he
is doing it by actually using his ears and making a few valid observations.
This is in contrast to the "high end" audiophiles who write in the magazines
who claim to be subjectivists using their ears rather than instrumentation
and specs to evaluate sound. This author, Don Barringer, seems to have read
Art Benade, Dave Moulton, and possibly some of my stuff which has been in a
white paper for the AES in '89 and in the BAS Speaker and SMWTMS
newsletters. He is still a little too worried about frequency response
analysis to explain what he is hearing, but his observations, comments, and
conclusions are on the right track.

The major breakthrough comes when you begin to realize that stereophonic
(field-type) systems are not a head-related process like binaural, but a
modeling of the real thing by means of deploying sound sources in your
listening room and using your natural hearing to witness the result. In the
opposite universe, where audiophiles and new engineers think that the system
is one of relaying recorded signals to your ears untouched by any
interfering distortions or reflections, they think the goal is a near
anechoic environment and they do just the opposite of what leads to good
sound and magnificent, out-of-the-box imaging.

Barringer has arrived at a speaker positioning very much like what I
suggest. Here is a picture of my room:

http://www.pbase.com/eickmeier/image/712281

It is 21 ft wide by 31 ft long, and the speakers are placed approx 5 ft from
front and side walls, which puts them 10 ft apart. I have a center channel
as well now, also deployed in the reflecting mode so that the image plane is
consistent across the soundstage.

I am hesitant to use the "B" word because the conversation can degenerate to
a particular product, but yes, I am using Bose 901s, because anything else
is a room this size or smaller is way too hot on the direct sound to be able
to set up the image model. If you look at the next picture in my gallery
above, you can see a speaker I built a number of years ago trying to set up
an ideal situation for experimentation with the concept, but I wasn't quite
as good at speaker building as the Bose corporation, so I just use the 901s,
which, combined with the subs, sound magnificent and can take any amount of
power you put to them without distorting. The trick with a speaker with such
a large amount of reflected output is positioning them in a way that USES
the reflected sound images as part of the primary sound, and not nuisance
reflections of a "proper" direct sound. I prefer specular, hard reflections
up front for this reason, and have even peppered my front and side walls
with mirror tiles, to show visitors a visual model of what they are hearing.

The insight into speaker design, besides image modeling using reflected
sound, is Mark Davis's statement that the audible characteristics of a
speaker are mainly the frequency response and radiation pattern. Novice
engineers and audiophiles have the frequency response part down pat, but
have studied very little about the radiation pattern required and its
audible consequences because of the confusion between binaural and
field-type system theory. If you believe that all that is desired is the
direct sound, then you will do everything possible to eliminate all
reflections in speaker design and room treatment.

And that has been the history of sound reproduction theory and practice for
most of the industry thus far. This in spite of the Bose revolution of 1968
and the fantastic results from the 901s, the Magneplanars, ESL-63s, MBLs,
DBX Soundfield Ones, and possibly the Ohm F, which had a large following and
was basically an omni.

So what's your story?

Gary Eickmeier


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On 4/16/09 9:38 AM, in article , "Gary
Eickmeier" wrote:

"John Stone" wrote in message
...
On 4/15/09 9:25 AM, in article
,
" wrote:

On Apr 14, 3:06 am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:


- as an owner of dipoles, why are you so
against "splashing" the sound off the walls?

Because it severely damages the sound quality.

Here is an article from someone who knows a thing or two about dipole
loudspeakers, that takes the completely opposite view.

http://linkwitzlab.com/stereo%20reproduction.htm


Thank you, John, for an interesting read. He is starting to catch on, and he
is doing it by actually using his ears and making a few valid observations.
This is in contrast to the "high end" audiophiles who write in the magazines
who claim to be subjectivists using their ears rather than instrumentation
and specs to evaluate sound. This author, Don Barringer, seems to have read
Art Benade, Dave Moulton, and possibly some of my stuff which has been in a
white paper for the AES in '89 and in the BAS Speaker and SMWTMS
newsletters. He is still a little too worried about frequency response
analysis to explain what he is hearing, but his observations, comments, and
conclusions are on the right track.


Well, wait a minute, Gary. You need to look again. The author of this paper
is Siegfried Linkwitz himself, not Don Barringer. Don does recording, and
has been working on methods that optimize the playback model developed by
Linkwitz. And I don't think Mr. Linkwitz is "starting to catch on" to
anything. He's been doing this for many years.



The insight into speaker design, besides image modeling using reflected
sound, is Mark Davis's statement that the audible characteristics of a
speaker are mainly the frequency response and radiation pattern. Novice
engineers and audiophiles have the frequency response part down pat, but
have studied very little about the radiation pattern required and its
audible consequences because of the confusion between binaural and
field-type system theory. If you believe that all that is desired is the
direct sound, then you will do everything possible to eliminate all
reflections in speaker design and room treatment.


Clearly, Mr. Linkwitz' work is along these same lines, but I think he has
taken it to a considerably higher level. If you haven't been to his site
before, you'll find a wealth of information about speaker design, room
acoustics, etc.


And that has been the history of sound reproduction theory and practice for
most of the industry thus far. This in spite of the Bose revolution of 1968
and the fantastic results from the 901s, the Magneplanars, ESL-63s, MBLs,
DBX Soundfield Ones, and possibly the Ohm F, which had a large following and
was basically an omni.


Bose revolution of 1968? (Cough, cough)


So what's your story?


I've been around for a while. I've heard Mr. Linkwitz' setup and own Orions
myself. I'd bet that after hearing the system at Mr. Linkwitz' home, even
Scott might have to rethink his position on dipole radiation.



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On Apr 16, 12:36*pm, John Stone wrote:
On 4/16/09 9:38 AM, in article , "Gary
This in spite of the Bose revolution of 1968
and the fantastic results from the 901s,


And interesting spin of history (pun very much intended).

Bose revolution of 1968? (Cough, cough)


Ah yes, the leopard shows his true spots at last.
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On Apr 16, 10:31*am, wrote:
On Apr 15, 5:47*pm, John Stone wrote:





On 4/15/09 9:25 AM, in article ,


" wrote:
On Apr 14, 3:06*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
- as an owner of dipoles, why are you so
against "splashing" the sound off the walls?


Because it severely damages the sound quality.


Here is an article from someone who knows a thing or two about dipole
loudspeakers, that takes the completely opposite view.


http://linkwitzlab.com/stereo%20reproduction.htm


or the AES paper, if you want to go into further detail


http://linkwitzlab.com/AES'07/AES123-final2.pdf


And how do you position your speakers? Close to the walls or a few
feet from all walls?
Niether. My speakers are about seven feet from the back (front) wall.
They are rather close to the side walls but the side wall reflections
are delt with by sound absorbtion from behind the speakers and a
physical blocking of the early reflection points infront of the
speakers and by the shape of the speakers themselves. My back (front)
wall is heavily covered in absorbtion materials. My listening position
is about 7 1/2 feet from the front of the speakers (near field) the
rest of the room is heavily treated with absorbtion and diffusion.


You definitely seem to be in the "reflections are evil" camp. Getting back
to that anechoic chamber discussion, is your goal to eliminate as much
reflected energy as possible?


My goal is to get the best aesthetic sound quality I can. IMO the
standard for that aesthetic is set by live acoustic music played in an
excellent concert hall. I have found so far that the more I deaden the
room and the closer I get to a pure feed directly from the speakers
the better that illusion and the better the aesthetic results. If
there is such a point where the room is actually too dead and starts
to work against my aesthetic goals I have not found it yet. But my
room, as dead as it is, is a pretty far cry from an anechoic chamber.


It's great to read something here with which I completely agree and
matches both my goals and experiences. I've been listening to various
model Maggie Tympanis for over 40 years, and more recently a 3.6R,
the former in 2 homes and listening rooms. Currently I'm using a
Maggie hybrid; the four Tympani IVa woofer panels + a 3.6R within a
dedicated listening room (which perhaps needless to say, are dipoles).
I'd say I'm listening mid-field, about 11 feet away and the array of
panels extending 12 feet at their distant edges, four feet from the
side walls and 4.5 feet from the front wall (that area at the rear of
the speakers!) However my listening chair is on casters and is
completely free to move closer and further whenever I choose.

Or do you consider some room contribution to
be acceptable, even desirable?


Not yet.

Your selection of dipole speakers is also interesting given your statement
that sound reflected off the walls is damaging to the quality.


It is rather incedental that both my old Martin Logans and my current
Sound Labs are dipole. I bought them for their extraordinary
transparency. that transparency is compramised when I put them closer
to the "front" walls and/or when I reduce the amount of sound
absorbing or sound diffusing materials in the room. In short, i chose
both speakers for their exceptional front wave not for their baggage
coming out the rear


I use no sounding absorbing or diffusing materials other than vertical
blinds under drape covered windows, CD, LP and component racks
distributed around the room's periphery. Although the sound I hear
can't match live, in part because no recording is so capable. After
coming home from listening at good seats at the Metropolitan Opera, my
home sound doesn't disappoint.


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"John Stone" wrote in message
...
On 4/16/09 9:38 AM, in article , "Gary
Eickmeier" wrote:


Well, wait a minute, Gary. You need to look again. The author of this
paper
is Siegfried Linkwitz himself, not Don Barringer. Don does recording, and
has been working on methods that optimize the playback model developed by
Linkwitz. And I don't think Mr. Linkwitz is "starting to catch on" to
anything. He's been doing this for many years.


Well, the only part of that page that was signed by Linkwitz was the
slideshow. The main article was completely unsigned, except that at the
bottom was Don Barringer. I couldn't view the AES papers links, if those
were by Linkwitz.



The insight into speaker design, besides image modeling using reflected
sound, is Mark Davis's statement that the audible characteristics of a
speaker are mainly the frequency response and radiation pattern. Novice
engineers and audiophiles have the frequency response part down pat, but
have studied very little about the radiation pattern required and its
audible consequences because of the confusion between binaural and
field-type system theory. If you believe that all that is desired is the
direct sound, then you will do everything possible to eliminate all
reflections in speaker design and room treatment.


Clearly, Mr. Linkwitz' work is along these same lines, but I think he has
taken it to a considerably higher level. If you haven't been to his site
before, you'll find a wealth of information about speaker design, room
acoustics, etc.


I'll take a look.

And that has been the history of sound reproduction theory and practice
for
most of the industry thus far. This in spite of the Bose revolution of
1968
and the fantastic results from the 901s, the Magneplanars, ESL-63s, MBLs,
DBX Soundfield Ones, and possibly the Ohm F, which had a large following
and
was basically an omni.


Bose revolution of 1968? (Cough, cough)


Well, it built a factory on a mountaintop. Quite successful and highly
imitated.

So what's your story?


I've been around for a while. I've heard Mr. Linkwitz' setup and own
Orions
myself. I'd bet that after hearing the system at Mr. Linkwitz' home, even
Scott might have to rethink his position on dipole radiation.


Never. I guarantee it.

Gary Eickmeier

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wrote in message ...
On Apr 15, 10:01 pm, "Gary Eickmeier"


More to the point. Electrostatic speakers. The dipole thing is just an
unfortunate by-product.


I wish to make a simple observation here. As Mark Davis has shown, the
audible characteristics of a speaker are its frequency response and
radiation pattern. That's it. The dipole aspect of your speakers are a very
audible and significant contributor to their sound. As for frequency
response, if another speaker that wasn't an electrostatic had the same
frequency response and radiation pattern, it wouldn't matter a whit if it
was made of garbage can lids instead of electrostatic membranes, it would
sound the same. The electrostaticness is not the main point.


I get that with my arrangement. But what I also get is an amazing
level of transparency. A level that I doubt possible with all those
reflections. You can't help but get substantial smearing in the time
domain with all those direct reflections.


Gad, I don't want to get into another long winded discussion on this stuff.
The basic psychoacoustic facts of life are that the reflections will not be
heard as separate sound events, or "smearing," if they are well within the
fusion time. It's like in the concert hall. Do you imagine that the
contribution of the hall to the sound is detrimental? Read Art Benade, "From
Instrument to Ear in a Room." He shows how the response plot of a real
instrument played in a real room is a nut-house of waves and unrecognizable
wiggles, but the sound of the instrument remains clear as a bell, even more
identifiable, and clearly placed in the acoustic space.

I have Sound Labs now. But they are very similar in many ways. But the
"front" wall is a much bigger issue with the Sound Labs than they were
with the Martin Logans. I guess it comes with bigger drivers.


Peter Walker used to set up his ESL-63s as you describe your speaker
placement - about 7 ft out from the front wall and just a foot or two from
the side walls. What I heard was the back wave of the speaker filling up the
area behind the speakers, giving an impression of great depth. Canny.

Gary Eickmeier


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On Apr 17, 1:25*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
"John Stone" wrote in message
Bose revolution of 1968? (Cough, cough)

Well, it built a factory on a mountaintop.
Quite successful


Just like MacDonalds...

and highly imitated.


One might suggest such a spin is quite in
contradiction with both the facts of the
marketplace and the widespread reputation
of said company's legal department.


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On Apr 17, 3:11*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in ...
On Apr 15, 10:01 pm, "Gary Eickmeier"
More to the point. Electrostatic speakers. The dipole thing is just an
unfortunate by-product.


I wish to make a simple observation here. As Mark Davis has shown, the
audible characteristics of a speaker are its frequency response and
radiation pattern. That's it.


That is simply not true. There are other distortions.

The dipole aspect of your speakers are a very
audible and significant contributor to their sound.


Not so much in my room with my set up.

As for frequency
response, if another speaker that wasn't an electrostatic had the same
frequency response and radiation pattern, it wouldn't matter a whit if it
was made of garbage can lids instead of electrostatic membranes, it would
sound the same.


Again that is plainly wrong. So much so that I find the assertion
quite surprising.

The electrostaticness is not the main point.



Sure it is. Consider the mass of the driver of an electrostatic
speaker for starters.


I get that with my arrangement. But what I also get is an amazing
level of transparency. A level that I doubt possible with all those
reflections. You can't help but get substantial smearing in the time
domain with all those direct reflections.


Gad, I don't want to get into another long winded discussion on this stuff.
The basic psychoacoustic facts of life are that the reflections will not be
heard as separate sound events, or "smearing," if they are well within the
fusion time.


Again you are simply wrong. Our hearing acuity is quite sensitive to
smearing.

It's like in the concert hall. Do you imagine that the
contribution of the hall to the sound is detrimental?


You ask the wrong question. Is it audible? Yes. So there is your
answer. We do hear the smearing. The profound mistake you seem to
continue to make is the continued confusion between the concert hall
and the playback room. They serve an extremely different purpose. Do
you really think a concert hall is a good envirement for stereo
playback?

Read Art Benade, "From
Instrument to Ear in a Room." He shows how the response plot of a real
instrument played in a real room is a nut-house of waves and unrecognizable
wiggles, but the sound of the instrument remains clear as a bell, even more
identifiable, and clearly placed in the acoustic space.


I see no point in reading the article. No one here is disputing the
aesthetic value of reverb in live music.


I have Sound Labs now. But they are very similar in many ways. But the
"front" wall is a much bigger issue with the Sound Labs than they were
with the Martin Logans. I guess it comes with bigger drivers.


Peter Walker used to set up his ESL-63s as you describe your speaker
placement - about 7 ft out from the front wall and just a foot or two from
the side walls. What I heard was the back wave of the speaker filling up the
area behind the speakers, giving an impression of great depth. Canny.


I wonder if he had as much absorbtion material on the walls behind
those speakers as I do?

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wrote in message
...
On Apr 16, 12:36 pm, John Stone wrote:
On 4/16/09 9:38 AM, in article , "Gary
This in spite of the Bose revolution of 1968
and the fantastic results from the 901s,


And interesting spin of history (pun very much intended).

Bose revolution of 1968? (Cough, cough)


Ah yes, the leopard shows his true spots at last.


"True spots"? I can't help but ask what that means.

Gary Eickmeier


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wrote in message

On Apr 17, 3:11 am, "Gary Eickmeier"
wrote:
wrote in
...
On Apr 15, 10:01 pm, "Gary Eickmeier"

More to the point. Electrostatic speakers. The dipole
thing is just an unfortunate by-product.


I wish to make a simple observation here. As Mark Davis
has shown, the audible characteristics of a speaker are
its frequency response and radiation pattern. That's it.


That is simply not true. There are other distortions.


It is about 90% or more true. Yes there are other distortions, but they are
relatively small.

The dipole aspect of your speakers are a very
audible and significant contributor to their sound.


Not so much in my room with my set up.


You did something that is a little odd. You obtained speakers with some
well-known properties that many informed people would call suboptimal.

You then attempted to alleviate the suboptimal properties of your speakers
by changing your room, apparently changing it profoundly. You seem to be
well on your way towards creating what may be the world's largest set of
headphones. ;-)

As for frequency
response, if another speaker that wasn't an
electrostatic had the same frequency response and
radiation pattern, it wouldn't matter a whit if it was
made of garbage can lids instead of electrostatic
membranes, it would sound the same.


Again that is plainly wrong.


Its about 90% or more true.

So much so that I find the assertion quite surprising.


Speaks to the degree to which you are properly informed about loudspeakers
and rooms.

The electrostaticness is not the main point.


Sure it is. Consider the mass of the driver of an
electrostatic speaker for starters.


There is *no* useful physical system that is properly characterized by just
its mass. For example, take an airplane. Does just the mass of the airplane
define how it flies, how far it flies, how fast it flies, how well it flies,
how much it can carry, etc.? No. This apparently will surprise you
greatly. but things other than mass also matter.

The same is true of loudspeakers. You have to consider more than just the
mass of the driver diaphragms to understand how they work.

I get that with my arrangement. But what I also get is
an amazing level of transparency. A level that I doubt
possible with all those reflections. You can't help but
get substantial smearing in the time domain with all
those direct reflections.


Gad, I don't want to get into another long winded
discussion on this stuff. The basic psychoacoustic facts
of life are that the reflections will not be heard as
separate sound events, or "smearing," if they are well
within the fusion time.


Again you are simply wrong. Our hearing acuity is quite
sensitive to smearing.


If that were really true, the time-smearing caused by our rooms would drive
us bonkers.

It's like in the concert hall. Do you imagine that the
contribution of the hall to the sound is detrimental?


You ask the wrong question. Is it audible? Yes. So there
is your answer. We do hear the smearing.


Hold that thought!

The profound
mistake you seem to continue to make is the continued
confusion between the concert hall and the playback room.


I perceive no confusion. For example, if you wish to reduce the colorations
of the playback room to a minimum using established technology,. you can
always put on headphones or better yet, earphones.

They serve an extremely different purpose. Do you really
think a concert hall is a good environment for stereo
playback?


The point you seem to have missed is that people choose to l isten to
speakers in a room, for a reason. They make the choice to listen there and
not by readily available alternative means. One of the inherent consequences
of that choice is the acoustical presence of the room.

Read Art Benade, "From
Instrument to Ear in a Room." He shows how the response
plot of a real instrument played in a real room is a
nut-house of waves and unrecognizable wiggles, but the
sound of the instrument remains clear as a bell, even
more identifiable, and clearly placed in the acoustic

space.


I see no point in reading the article.


That seems to be a pattern with you.

You say many things that seem to result from a recurrent choice to not be
well-read.

No one here is
disputing the aesthetic value of reverb in live music.


The point is missed, again.

I have Sound Labs now. But they are very similar in
many ways. But the "front" wall is a much bigger issue
with the Sound Labs than they were with the Martin
Logans. I guess it comes with bigger drivers.


Peter Walker used to set up his ESL-63s as you describe
your speaker placement - about 7 ft out from the front
wall and just a foot or two from the side walls. What I
heard was the back wave of the speaker filling up the
area behind the speakers, giving an impression of great
depth. Canny.


I wonder if he had as much absorption material on the
walls behind those speakers as I do?


Hard to know in the absence of relevant facts.

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Gary Eickmeier wrote:

I wish to make a simple observation here. As Mark Davis has shown, the
audible characteristics of a speaker are its frequency response and
radiation pattern. That's it.


Well, there is distortion too .. and that is very audible, especially
high frequency intermod.

But the radiation pattern is not a simple thing. That is, a
speaker is not a point source. Nor is your usual dipole radiator
a simple planar source, because of standing modes on the
radiator. Below a certain frequency, yes, any speaker is
effectively a point. But for dipoles that is very low indeed.

Doug McDonald


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On Apr 17, 11:41*am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
wrote in message


On Apr 17, 3:11 am, "Gary Eickmeier"
wrote:
wrote in
...
More to the point. Electrostatic speakers. The dipole
thing is just an unfortunate by-product.


I wish to make a simple observation here. As Mark Davis
has shown, the audible characteristics of a speaker are
its frequency response and radiation pattern. That's it.


That is simply not true. There are other distortions.


It is about 90% or more true.


No. There are no percentages here. The statement is one that is either
true or not true. In this case it is not true.

Yes there are other distortions,


Exactly, which makes the assertion that " the audible characteristics
of a speaker are its frequency response and radiation pattern. That's
it." a false statement.

but they are
relatively small.


Relative to what? By what measure? Your assertion lacks the context
needed to have any utility or meaning.


The dipole aspect of your speakers are a very
audible and significant contributor to their sound.

Not so much in my room with my set up.


You did something that is a little odd. You obtained speakers with some
well-known properties that many informed people would call suboptimal.


Informed people know that every speaker system in the world has
"suboptimal properties" so your assertion about that is both obvious
and fairly useless.


You then attempted to alleviate the suboptimal properties of your speakers
by changing your room,


Yeah. That is considered smart in most audio circles. Are you
suggesting that it is anything other than a good idea to optimise the
listening room for the specific speakers being used in that room?

apparently changing it profoundly.


Yes, all for a good cause.

You seem to be
well on your way towards creating what may be the world's largest set of
headphones. ;-)


Not at all. I have headphones. They are nothing like my speaker/room
set up. My speakers sit in front of the listening position. They are
about seven and a half feet apart. the listening position and the
speakers form a near equalateral triangle. This is an ideal
arrangement for excellent stereo recordings. You can't get any kind of
an illusion of realistic imaging from headphones with the vast
majority of stereo recordings because they simply aren';t binaural.


As for frequency
response, if another speaker that wasn't an
electrostatic had the same frequency response and
radiation pattern, it wouldn't matter a whit if it was
made of garbage can lids instead of electrostatic
membranes, it would sound the same.

Again that is plainly wrong.


Its about 90% or more true.


No, as above it either is or is not true. It plainly is not true. I
think you will find yourself in quite the minority amoung speaker
designers when it comes to such a dismissal of materials used in
making drivers.


So much so that I find the assertion quite surprising.


Speaks to the degree to which you are properly informed about loudspeakers
and rooms.


Yes. It shows that I have done my home work on the subject.


The electrostaticness is not the main point.

Sure it is. Consider the mass of the driver of an
electrostatic speaker for starters.


There is *no* useful physical system that is properly characterized by just
its mass.


Straw man. I didn't say anything of the sort. By suggesting that one
consider the advantages of the mass of an electrostatic speaker i am
not suggesting, implying or saying in any other way that one can
chgaracterize electrostatic speakers or any other speaker by mass
alone.


I get that with my arrangement. But what I also get is
an amazing level of transparency. A level that I doubt
possible with all those reflections. You can't help but
get substantial smearing in the time domain with all
those direct reflections.
Gad, I don't want to get into another long winded
discussion on this stuff. The basic psychoacoustic facts
of life are that the reflections will not be heard as
separate sound events, or "smearing," if they are well
within the fusion time.

Again you are simply wrong. Our hearing acuity is quite
sensitive to smearing.


If that were really true, the time-smearing caused by our rooms would drive
us bonkers.


How did you reach that deduction? Please explain the logic.


It's like in the concert hall. Do you imagine that the
contribution of the hall to the sound is detrimental?

You ask the wrong question. Is it audible? Yes. So there
is your answer. We do hear the smearing.


Hold that thought!


Holding. (I read ahead, you never get back to it)


The profound
mistake you seem to continue to make is the continued
confusion between the concert hall and the playback room.


I perceive no confusion.


Your perception is not the arbitrator of the truth of my assertion. It
is entirely possible that you are simply suffering from the same
confusion.

*For example, if you wish to reduce the colorations
of the playback room to a minimum using established technology,. you can
always put on headphones or better yet, earphones.


What does that have to do with my assertion that the other poster is
confusing the basic princples of acoustics of a concert hall with the
basic principles of acoustics for a playback room? We are not talking
about headphones here. we are talking about room acoustics for
speakers.


They serve an extremely different purpose. Do you really
think a concert hall is a good environment for stereo
playback?


The point you seem to have missed is that people choose to l isten to
speakers in a room, *for a reason. They make the choice to listen there and
not by readily available alternative means. One of the inherent consequences
of that choice is the acoustical presence of the room.


What are you trying to say? It seems you are asserting that by
choosing to use speakers instead of headphones one should simply live
with the acoustics of the listening room instead of making an effort
to optimise the acoustics of that listening room. If that is what you
are asserting then you are plainly wrong. I suggest you read up on
some literature on acoustics for playback rooms. You will see that the
experts highly recomend room optimization. If that isn't what you are
asserting then perhaps you should try to explain just what it is you
are trying to say.


Read Art Benade, "From
Instrument to Ear in a Room." He shows how the response
plot of a real instrument played in a real room is a
nut-house of waves and unrecognizable wiggles, but the
sound of the instrument remains clear as a bell, even
more identifiable, and clearly placed in the acoustic

space.
I see no point in reading the article.


That seems to be a pattern with you.


One gets quite adept at sniffing out irrelevant references on
rec.audio. high end.


You say many things that seem to result from a recurrent choice to not be
well-read.


That is your misperception. But I know that I need not read another
article on concert hall acoustics when we are debating playback room
acoustics. That is because I have already read enough liturature on
room acoustics to know the profound differences between excellent
acoustics in a concert hall and excellent acoustics in a dedicated
playback room.


No one here is
disputing the aesthetic value of reverb in live music.


The point is missed, again.


Yes, but by whom? Me thinks you missed the point and that you also
seem to suffer from a profound confusion about the differences between
the acoustics of a concert hall and the acoustics of a playback room.


I have Sound Labs now. But they are very similar in
many ways. But the "front" wall is a much bigger issue
with the Sound Labs than they were with the Martin
Logans. I guess it comes with bigger drivers.


Peter Walker used to set up his ESL-63s as you describe
your speaker placement - about 7 ft out from the front
wall and just a foot or two from the side walls. What I
heard was the back wave of the speaker filling up the
area behind the speakers, giving an impression of great
depth. Canny.

I wonder if he had as much absorption material on the
walls behind those speakers as I do?


Hard to know in the absence of relevant facts.


Then one can't really point to that as evidence of anything.

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wrote in message ...
On Apr 17, 11:41 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:


That is your misperception. But I know that I need not read another
article on concert hall acoustics when we are debating playback room
acoustics. That is because I have already read enough liturature on
room acoustics to know the profound differences between excellent
acoustics in a concert hall and excellent acoustics in a dedicated
playback room.


No one here is
disputing the aesthetic value of reverb in live music.


The point is missed, again.


Yes, but by whom? Me thinks you missed the point and that you also
seem to suffer from a profound confusion about the differences between
the acoustics of a concert hall and the acoustics of a playback room.


No S888Wheel, there is no confusion between concert hall acoustics and
listening room acoustics. But there is great confusion between binaural
systems and stereophonic (field-type) systems.

Imagine that you had made a recording with a binaural head in a great
concert hall. You would have placed the head in the ideal listening seat,
and it would have received all of the sound signals you wanted to preserve:
the direct sound of the instruments, the early reflected sound, and the
reverberant field. For playback, you would want to present only those
signals to your ears, and even to the extent of making sure that each
channel went only to the appropriate ear. You would not want another
acoustic space superimposed on what was recorded, because that would confuse
the perception of the recorded space that you have so cleverly captured.

OK so far? Is this a perfect system or what? Everything you have said above
and in previous posts is true.

The problem is, you are theorizing the same goals for your stereo playback,
and the stereophonic system does not work that way. The recording itself was
made with the microphones much closer to the instruments, and even with
multiple mikes if the situation called for it. And there is nothing wrong
with that! Playback is meant to happen in another acoustic space, done in a
way that models the playback horizontal reflection pattern after the
original. That would be a much longer story, so permit me to just focus in
on one tiny aspect of loudspeaker reproduction.

In your playback room, both of your ears are meant to hear both speakers,
using your natural hearing, not some "trick" pseudo binaural attempt to
present just the signals from the speakers straight into your ears. You
perceive the left stage sounds as coming from the left speaker, and the same
from the right, and summing localization works quite well for everything in
between. But if you confuse this system with the binaural system where that
IS meant to happen, that is, that you want your ears to hear only the two
recorded channels from the speakers and nothing else, what will result is
that all of the sound that was recorded, the direct, early reflected, and
reverberant sound, will be heard to come from only those two point sources,
and it will sound TERRIBLE. It has frequently been described as harsh,
strident, or irritating. And this is especially true if you have mistakenly
equalized for flat response at the listening position.

We can alleviate this harshness somewhat by using at least very wide
radiation patterns, and even dipolar and omnidirectional speakers. This
helps to get the sound OUTSIDE the speaker boxes by means of reflection from
the surfaces around them. Note carefully that this is NOT the same as
listening to an omni in a free field, because then you would be right back
to two point sources with all of the recorded sound coming from those two
points, very unnatural sounding and not even decoding the recorded imaging
and acoustics properly. Also note that setting up this pattern of
reflections is NOT an attempt to manufacture the acoustics of the original
hall, but to decode the acoustics that were recorded. Finally, note that by
deadening all of the surfaces around your speakers you have defeated any
chance of your dipoles getting a little spaciousness and depth out of the
recording.

You may believe that it is working for you because that is what you are used
to, but I think if you listen with a new critical perspective you may note
that if any of the sounds in the stereo field get away from center, they
seem to collapse into the grills of each speaker, rather than arraying
themselves in an even plane behind and around the speakers. I have become
particularly sensitive to that and find it really annoying.

All of this is my observations of many years combined with a lot of reading
and talking with engineers and acousticians and formulating a few theories
of my own. When we talk about this "headphone effect from speakers" we are
talking about the mistaken attempt to present only the sound from the
speakers to your ears. I experienced this full force one fine afternoon
listening to a pair of Acoustats. These were planar electrostats that were
extremely directional at all frequencies. They sat me down quite close to
them in the classic (and also mistaken) equilateral triangle, and when the
music started playing I thought my ears were being sucked off. I just about
ran from the room. I guess the sales people were blissfully happy with this
effect, but you can have it if that is what you are trying for.

I have not heard your room and you have not heard mine, so I guess we'll
have to leave it at that. You may not have killed as much of the high
frequency sound as you think you have, and it may just sound fine. All I can
do is speak in a general way and report that what I have read about
acoustics etc. agrees with observation, and I now know why extremely
directional speakers do NOT sound good, and am willing to divulge it to
whoever is willing to listen - so to speak.

Gary Eickmeier


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On Apr 19, 7:03*pm, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in ...
On Apr 17, 11:41 am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
That is your misperception. But I know that I need not read another
article on concert hall acoustics when we are debating playback room
acoustics. That is because I have already read enough liturature on
room acoustics to know the profound differences between excellent
acoustics in a concert hall and excellent acoustics in a dedicated
playback room.


No one here is
disputing the aesthetic value of reverb in live music.


The point is missed, again.


Yes, but by whom? Me thinks you missed the point and that you also
seem to suffer from a profound confusion about the differences between
the acoustics of a concert hall and the acoustics of a playback room.


No S888Wheel, there is no confusion between concert hall acoustics and
listening room acoustics. But there is great confusion between binaural
systems and stereophonic (field-type) systems.


There is? By whom?


Imagine that you had made a recording with a binaural head in a great
concert hall. You would have placed the head in the ideal listening seat,
and it would have received all of the sound signals you wanted to preserve:
the direct sound of the instruments, the early reflected sound, and the
reverberant field. For playback, you would want to present only those
signals to your ears, and even to the extent of making sure that each
channel went only to the appropriate ear. You would not want another
acoustic space superimposed on what was recorded, because that would confuse
the perception of the recorded space that you have so cleverly captured.



Yeah....that's how binaural recordings are made more or less and that
is how they are supposed to work

OK so far?


So far....


Is this a perfect system or what?


Not perfect. That system does not acount for human head movement. But
that is another topic. lets say if one had the perfect binaural
recording and headphone system. That would probably be the best one
can get from any sort of stereophonic recording and playback system.


Everything you have said above
and in previous posts is true.

The problem is, you are theorizing the same goals for your stereo playback,
and the stereophonic system does not work that way.


No I am not. My playback system is more or less the counter of a
Blumlien configuration. It is based on *that* particular approach to
stereo recording and playback. It just so happens that most other
stereo recordings happen to sound their best with the same
configuration. (yes that is my opinion)


The recording itself was
made with the microphones much closer to the instruments,



whoa hold on there. What recording? Were we discussing a specific
recording?



and even with
multiple mikes if the situation called for it. And there is nothing wrong
with that! Playback is meant to happen in another acoustic space, done in a
way that models the playback horizontal reflection pattern after the
original. That would be a much longer story, so permit me to just focus in
on one tiny aspect of loudspeaker reproduction.


Sorry but I think you are just making this part up. It certainly is
not true for minimalist recordings. IME it certainly is not the case
for most conventional stereo recordings.




In your playback room, both of your ears are meant to hear both speakers,
using your natural hearing, not some "trick" pseudo binaural attempt to
present just the signals from the speakers straight into your ears.



There is no pseudo binaural anything going on with my setup. Again it
is basically a counter to a Blumlien configuration. It is set up using
conventional, not binaural stereo recordings from state of the art
minimalist recordings to multi-track studio creations.


You
perceive the left stage sounds as coming from the left speaker, and the same
from the right, and summing localization works quite well for everything in
between. But if you confuse this system with the binaural system where that
IS meant to happen, that is, that you want your ears to hear only the two
recorded channels from the speakers and nothing else, what will result is
that all of the sound that was recorded, the direct, early reflected, and
reverberant sound, will be heard to come from only those two point sources,
and it will sound TERRIBLE.



Clearly that isn't what I am doing nor is it what is happening. I
actually do listen to my system. I know what I am hearing. The
illusion of a three dimensional sound space in which instruments are
portrayed in a life like manner is pretty uncanny with the right
minimalist recordings with my system set up the way it is set up. that
illusion so far has been aided by everything I have done to minimize
the affects of the room itself on the playback. this is not some
theory. I know this from years of practice.


It has frequently been described as harsh,
strident, or irritating. And this is especially true if you have mistakenly
equalized for flat response at the listening position.



The only time I get harsh, strident or irritating sound is when that
is the character of the source material.



We can alleviate this harshness somewhat by using at least very wide
radiation patterns, and even dipolar and omnidirectional speakers.



There are other ways of alleviating harshness commonly found in stereo
recording and playback through the careful selection of hardware and
source material. Not only does this go a long way to alleviate said
harshness but it does so without losing the life like qualities one
can often find in world class recording and playback. Something I have
always found severely crippled by listening rooms with excessive
reverb or by positioning of dipoles to close to the front wall.


This
helps to get the sound OUTSIDE the speaker boxes by means of reflection from
the surfaces around them.



If you want greater width you can simply move the speakers further
apart. That way you aren't smearing the initial wave.


Note carefully that this is NOT the same as
listening to an omni in a free field, because then you would be right back
to two point sources with all of the recorded sound coming from those two
points, very unnatural sounding and not even decoding the recorded imaging
and acoustics properly.


Again I thgink you are plainly wrong there having heard extraordinary
imaging from my system.


Also note that setting up this pattern of
reflections is NOT an attempt to manufacture the acoustics of the original
hall, but to decode the acoustics that were recorded.



O.K. please explain how this "decodes" anything? what is the
mechanisms of 'encoding" and "decoding" going on here? I'm sorry but
that is complete nonsense. No such "decoding" and encoding is taking
place with conventional stereo recording and playback. Any reflections
off the walls are purely distrotion. If *you* like those particular
distortions I'm not going to argue with *your* aesthetic preferences.
I have no issue with the use oif distortions to compensate for
inherent insuficiancies of stereo recording and playback for the
purpose of creating a better illusion of live music. BUT IME bouncing
the sound off the walls isn't a distortion that achieves that goal.
Quite the opposite. It consistantly screws it up. Again I am speaking
from my personal 20+ years of experience with dipoles.


Finally, note that by
deadening all of the surfaces around your speakers you have defeated any
chance of your dipoles getting a little spaciousness and depth out of the
recording.


That is simply not true. I know. I have actually listened to my
system. You have not.




You may believe that it is working for you because that is what you are used
to, but I think if you listen with a new critical perspective you may note
that if any of the sounds in the stereo field get away from center, they
seem to collapse into the grills of each speaker, rather than arraying
themselves in an even plane behind and around the speakers.



Nope. That simply is not what is happening.


I have become
particularly sensitive to that and find it really annoying.

All of this is my observations of many years combined with a lot of reading
and talking with engineers and acousticians and formulating a few theories
of my own. When we talk about this "headphone effect from speakers" we are
talking about the mistaken attempt to present only the sound from the
speakers to your ears. I experienced this full force one fine afternoon
listening to a pair of Acoustats. These were planar electrostats that were
extremely directional at all frequencies. They sat me down quite close to
them in the classic (and also mistaken) equilateral triangle, and when the
music started playing I thought my ears were being sucked off. I just about
ran from the room. I guess the sales people were blissfully happy with this
effect, but you can have it if that is what you are trying for.

I have not heard your room and you have not heard mine, so I guess we'll
have to leave it at that. You may not have killed as much of the high
frequency sound as you think you have, and it may just sound fine. All I can
do is speak in a general way and report that what I have read about
acoustics etc. agrees with observation, and I now know why extremely
directional speakers do NOT sound good, and am willing to divulge it to
whoever is willing to listen - so to speak.



Then I guess we will leave it at that.

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wrote in message
...
On Apr 19, 7:03 pm, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:


This
helps to get the sound OUTSIDE the speaker boxes by means of reflection
from
the surfaces around them.



If you want greater width you can simply move the speakers further
apart. That way you aren't smearing the initial wave.


Aye, there's the rub. I have discovered that with speakers that are more
omnidirectional, moving them farther apart actually has the opposite effect,
because when you move them closer to the side walls, their reflected images
move closer together and cause a "clustering" of images near the actual
speakers. This is the main reason for a perception of 6-foot wide soloists
and vague center imaging. You maximize image width (total soundstage width)
by placing the speakers 1/4 of the room width away from the side walls.

Also note that setting up this pattern of
reflections is NOT an attempt to manufacture the acoustics of the
original
hall, but to decode the acoustics that were recorded.



O.K. please explain how this "decodes" anything? what is the
mechanisms of 'encoding" and "decoding" going on here? I'm sorry but
that is complete nonsense. No such "decoding" and encoding is taking
place with conventional stereo recording and playback. Any reflections
off the walls are purely distrotion. If *you* like those particular
distortions I'm not going to argue with *your* aesthetic preferences.
I have no issue with the use oif distortions to compensate for
inherent insuficiancies of stereo recording and playback for the
purpose of creating a better illusion of live music. BUT IME bouncing
the sound off the walls isn't a distortion that achieves that goal.
Quite the opposite. It consistantly screws it up. Again I am speaking
from my personal 20+ years of experience with dipoles.


Perhaps the easiest way to ease into this subject is to refer to surround
sound decoders. They can do a fairly effective job of decoding the ambience
from a two channel recording by means of placing extra speakers behind
and/or beside you with some time delay so that they do not move the frontal
sound image around. Most people find that with such a setup - and we are not
talking about echo simulation programs here, such as "Movie Theater," "Jazz
Club," and 'Rock Concert" - we are talking about just simple Dolby Surround,
for example. If the recording is very dry it doesn't change that -
everything just stays up front and intimate. But if it contains a lot of
ambience, the surround speakers seem to bring that around and out of the
recording a lot better than just the two front speakers alone.

So if surround sound can bring out the full reverberant field a little
better than stereo alone, what I am proposing is that some extra sound
sources from behind and to the frontal sides of the main speakers can bring
out the early reflected sounds that were recorded better than the two
speakers alone. I achieve that by means of reflection; some people do it
with extra speakers near the front sidewalls on delay.

The key to this whole operation is to realize that all of the recorded
sounds have been reduced to two channels (in simple stereo recordings), so
to present all of those sounds from just the locations of the direct sounds
of the instruments is an error. You get the big picture on this by making a
drawing of the instruments on a soundstage along with their first
reflections from the walls around them, then arranging the speakers in your
home in a similar geometric pattern to model the direct, early reflected,
and full reverberant fields after the real thing. The early reflected is
taken care of by the reflected output of the front speakers, and the
reverberant by the surround speakers on delay. All of this in an effort to
correct the SPATIAL part of the playback. The TEMPORAL will be contained in
the recording to whatever extent it was recorded.

I call my approach Image Modeling, and my paper was An Image Model Theory
for Stereophonic Sound.

Gary Eickmeier

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On Apr 21, 7:20*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in message

...

On Apr 19, 7:03 pm, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
This
helps to get the sound OUTSIDE the speaker boxes by means of reflection
from
the surfaces around them.


If you want greater width you can simply move the speakers further
apart. That way you aren't smearing the initial wave.


Aye, there's the rub. I have discovered that with speakers that are more
omnidirectional, moving them farther apart actually has the opposite effect,
because when you move them closer to the side walls, their reflected images
move closer together and cause a "clustering" of images near the actual
speakers. This is the main reason for a perception of 6-foot wide soloists
and vague center imaging. You maximize image width (total soundstage width)
by placing the speakers 1/4 of the room width away from the side walls.



I don't doubt that moving omnis close to the side walls will screw up
the imaging. I believe this has been my position fromt he get go. You
need a big room to make omnis work well at all. OTOH this is not sucha
big problem with dipoles. But... the idea isn't to maximize width,
it's to get it right.










Also note that setting up this pattern of
reflections is NOT an attempt to manufacture the acoustics of the
original
hall, but to decode the acoustics that were recorded.


O.K. please explain how this "decodes" anything? what is the
mechanisms of 'encoding" and "decoding" going on here? I'm sorry but
that is complete nonsense. No such "decoding" and encoding is taking
place with conventional stereo recording and playback. Any reflections
off the walls are purely distrotion. If *you* like those particular
distortions I'm not going to argue with *your* aesthetic preferences.
I have no issue with the use oif distortions to compensate for
inherent insuficiancies of stereo recording and playback for the
purpose of creating a better illusion of live music. BUT IME bouncing
the sound off the walls isn't a distortion that achieves that goal.
Quite the opposite. It consistantly screws it up. Again I am speaking
from my personal 20+ years of experience with dipoles.


Perhaps the easiest way to ease into this subject is to refer to surround
sound decoders. They can do a fairly effective job of decoding the ambience
from a two channel recording by means of placing extra speakers behind
and/or beside you with some time delay so that they do not move the frontal
sound image around. Most people find that with such a setup - and we are not
talking about echo simulation programs here, such as "Movie Theater," "Jazz
Club," and 'Rock Concert" - we are talking about just simple Dolby Surround,
for example. If the recording is very dry it doesn't change that -
everything just stays up front and intimate. But if it contains a lot of
ambience, the surround speakers seem to bring that around and out of the
recording a lot better than just the two front speakers alone.



How does it manage to seperate the ambient information from everything
else?




So if surround sound can bring out the full reverberant field a little
better than stereo alone,



That's a great big if as far as I'm concerned....


what I am proposing is that some extra sound
sources from behind and to the frontal sides of the main speakers can bring
out the early reflected sounds that were recorded better than the two
speakers alone.


No way. The ambient sound is already on the recording if the recording
was done well or even close to done well. You are just taking the
direct sound and the ambient sound and then splashing it off the walls
to bring out the ambient sound of the listening room. That is purely
destructive coloration if one is looking for an illusion of the
original event.



I achieve that by means of reflection; some people do it
with extra speakers near the front sidewalls on delay.

The key to this whole operation is to realize that all of the recorded
sounds have been reduced to two channels (in simple stereo recordings), so
to present all of those sounds from just the locations of the direct sounds
of the instruments is an error.



Hold on here. You just said that "all" the recorded sound has been
reduced to two chanels. that is true, that includes the ambient sound.
so if it's done well the playback is playing the direct sound and the
reverb from the original venue. It's already there. You don't need to
add reverb with your listening room.


You get the big picture on this by making a
drawing of the instruments on a soundstage along with their first
reflections from the walls around them, then arranging the speakers in your
home in a similar geometric pattern to model the direct, early reflected,
and full reverberant fields after the real thing.



Um, how do you do this with an orchestral recording? How does one take
two speakers and arrange them in a similar geometric pattern of an
actual orchestra? Your listening room must be a whole lot bigger than
mine with over a hundred channels! Gary, stereo is an auraal illusion.
Stereo recording and playback is not designed ot be a reconstruct of
the original event. It's like 3D movies. You are trying to use stereo
in a way it simply was not designed to be used.


The early reflected is
taken care of by the reflected output of the front speakers, and the
reverberant by the surround speakers on delay. All of this in an effort to
correct the SPATIAL part of the playback. The TEMPORAL will be contained in
the recording to whatever extent it was recorded.


Yeah except you can't seperate the direct sound and reflected sound on
the recording and the reflected sound of the listening room is not the
same as the concert hall and the speakers aren't matching the
instruments etc etc etc. Stereo just doesn't work that way.



I call my approach Image Modeling, and my paper was An Image Model Theory
for Stereophonic Sound.

Gary Eickmeier- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -





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On Apr 22, 10:45*am, wrote:

No way. The ambient sound is already on the recording if the recording
was done well or even close to done well. You are just taking the
direct sound and the ambient sound and then splashing it off the walls
to bring out the ambient sound of the listening room. That is purely
destructive coloration if one is looking for an illusion of the
original event.

I achieve that by means of reflection; some people do it
with extra speakers near the front sidewalls on delay.


The key to this whole operation is to realize that all of the recorded
sounds have been reduced to two channels (in simple stereo recordings), so
to present all of those sounds from just the locations of the direct sounds
of the instruments is an error.


Hold on here. You just said that "all" the recorded sound has been
reduced to two chanels. that is true, that includes the ambient sound.
so if it's done well the playback is playing the direct sound and the
reverb from the original venue. It's already there. You don't need to
add reverb with your listening room.

You get the big picture on this by making a
drawing of the instruments on a soundstage along with their first
reflections from the walls around them, then arranging the speakers in your
home in a similar geometric pattern to model the direct, early reflected,
and full reverberant fields after the real thing.


Um, how do you do this with an orchestral recording? How does one take
two speakers and arrange them in a similar geometric pattern of an
actual orchestra? Your listening room must be a whole lot bigger than
mine with over a hundred channels! Gary, stereo is an auraal illusion.
Stereo recording and playback is not designed ot be a reconstruct of
the original event. It's like 3D movies. You are trying to use stereo
in a way it simply was not designed to be used.

to
correct the SPATIAL part of the playback. The TEMPORAL will be contained in
the recording to whatever extent it was recorded.


Yeah except you can't seperate the direct sound and reflected sound on
the recording and the reflected sound of the listening room is not the
same as the concert hall and the speakers aren't matching the
instruments etc etc etc. Stereo just doesn't work that way.

If one had a way, electronics and speakers etc. to fill a hall with
sound, and the played any stereo recording of any orchestral work, it
still wouldn't in any significant way sound like the original
performance, so how and why would it do so in any listening room using
any speaker system (under the sun)?
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Default Is flat frequency response desirable?

wrote in message
...
On Apr 21, 7:20 am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:


How does it manage to seperate the ambient information from everything
else?


The precedence effect.

No way. The ambient sound is already on the recording if the recording
was done well or even close to done well. You are just taking the
direct sound and the ambient sound and then splashing it off the walls
to bring out the ambient sound of the listening room. That is purely
destructive coloration if one is looking for an illusion of the
original event.

....

Hold on here. You just said that "all" the recorded sound has been
reduced to two chanels. that is true, that includes the ambient sound.
so if it's done well the playback is playing the direct sound and the
reverb from the original venue. It's already there. You don't need to
add reverb with your listening room.

Not adding reverb, just changing the spatial aspects of playback. It is very
difficult for someone new to all this to understand the difference between
spatial and temporal. Suffice it to say that a single reflection does not
make reverberation if it is within the fusion time.

The great confusion of stereo playback is "two speakers, two ears." People
just naturally think that the idea is to simply fill your two ears with the
pure sound from the two speakers, then you will hear all of the ambience
contained in the recording. I'm telling you that it is a field-type system
in which the idea is to recreate the performance by placing sound sources in
your playback space in positions that are geometrically similar to the
original locations. This could be any number of speakers and channels,
doesn't have to be two, and so has nothing whatsoever to do with the number
of ears on your head. We place sound sources around us and listen with our
natural hearing, not with some giant binaural hearing effect.

Um, how do you do this with an orchestral recording? How does one take
two speakers and arrange them in a similar geometric pattern of an
actual orchestra? Your listening room must be a whole lot bigger than
mine with over a hundred channels! Gary, stereo is an auraal illusion.
Stereo recording and playback is not designed ot be a reconstruct of
the original event. It's like 3D movies. You are trying to use stereo
in a way it simply was not designed to be used.


The minimum number of speakers to get some sort of auditory perspective
effect is two. It's just a simplification, not the principle of how it
works. Could have three or five. Or seven. Or twenty-one.


The early reflected is
taken care of by the reflected output of the front speakers, and the
reverberant by the surround speakers on delay. All of this in an effort
to
correct the SPATIAL part of the playback. The TEMPORAL will be contained
in
the recording to whatever extent it was recorded.


Yeah except you can't seperate the direct sound and reflected sound on
the recording and the reflected sound of the listening room is not the
same as the concert hall and the speakers aren't matching the
instruments etc etc etc. Stereo just doesn't work that way.


Oh? How does it work?

Gary Eickmeier


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Gary Eickmeier Gary Eickmeier is offline
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Default Is flat frequency response desirable?

wrote in message ...
On Apr 22, 10:45 am, wrote:


If one had a way, electronics and speakers etc. to fill a hall with
sound, and the played any stereo recording of any orchestral work, it
still wouldn't in any significant way sound like the original
performance, so how and why would it do so in any listening room using
any speaker system (under the sun)?


This is another misunderstanding of the system. We aren't always and only
trying to transport the listener to the concert hall. With binaural we are,
yes, but not with field-type systems. It's a sort of continuum in which we
might try for that effect (like with classical sometimes) and we might just
sometimes want to transport the performance to our listening room.

That is exactly what Edgar Vilchur was doing with his live vs recorded demos
at A.R. If you close-mike an instrument and play it back next to the real
instrument, you can fool the listener quite easily, because both sounds take
on the acoustics of the playback space. If you do that with several
instruments, then arrange the speakers in similar geometric positions, you
can have a little "player orchestra," something like a player piano -
perhaps the ultimate in electronic realism!

This is a fascinating, difficult subject. I have read two opinions now that
Floyd Toole's new book on loudspeakers and acoustics comes up short in a few
areas. It's just not a pat science yet, because there are so many variables
and because there is not and has never been a definitive theory for
stereophonic sound that gets it all right and covers all bases.

Except for mine, of course.

Gary Eickmeier

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[email protected] S888Wheel@aol.com is offline
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Default Is flat frequency response desirable?

On Apr 23, 8:11*pm, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in message

...

On Apr 21, 7:20 am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
How does it manage to seperate the ambient information from everything
else?


The precedence effect.


I'll bite, what's that?



No way. The ambient sound is already on the recording if the recording
was done well or even close to done well. You are just taking the
direct sound and the ambient sound and then splashing it off the walls
to bring out the ambient sound of the listening room. That is purely
destructive coloration if one is looking for an illusion of the
original event.


...

Hold on here. You just said that "all" the recorded sound has been
reduced to two chanels. that is true, that includes the ambient sound.
so if it's done well the playback is playing the direct sound and the
reverb from the original venue. It's already there. You don't need to
add reverb with your listening room.


Not adding reverb, just changing the spatial aspects of playback.


Any reflected sound off the walls of the listening room is reverb. So
yes, you are advocating that additional reverb from the listening room
be added to the sound.

It is very
difficult for someone new to all this to understand the difference between
spatial and temporal. Suffice it to say that a single reflection does not
make reverberation if it is within the fusion time.

The great confusion of stereo playback is "two speakers, two ears." People
just naturally think that the idea is to simply fill your two ears with the
pure sound from the two speakers, then you will hear all of the ambience
contained in the recording. I'm telling you that it is a field-type system
in which the idea is to recreate the performance by placing sound sources in
your playback space in positions that are geometrically similar to the
original locations. This could be any number of speakers and channels,
doesn't have to be two, and so has nothing whatsoever to do with the number
of ears on your head. We place sound sources around us and listen with our
natural hearing, not with some giant binaural hearing effect.


Yes, you are telling me that. Telling me that doesn't make it correct.
I'm telling you that it is incorrect. I'm telling you that in fact
stereo recordings (at least the good ones intended to create an
illusion of the original event) are designed to capture and then
playback the direct and reverberant sound in two chanels. I'm telling
you that there is no built in encoding and decoding of ambient sound
on conventional stereo recordings that must be decoded by bouncing the
sound off the walls of the listening room. I'm telling you taht by
bouncing the sound from the speakers off the walls all you are
actually doing is coloring the output with the sound of the listening
room.



Um, how do you do this with an orchestral recording? How does one take
two speakers and arrange them in a similar geometric pattern of an
actual orchestra? Your listening room must be a whole lot bigger than
mine with over a hundred channels! Gary, stereo is an auraal illusion.
Stereo recording and playback is not designed ot be a reconstruct of
the original event. It's like 3D movies. You are trying to use stereo
in a way it simply was not designed to be used.


The minimum number of speakers to get some sort of auditory perspective
effect is two. It's just a simplification, not the principle of how it
works. Could have three or five. Or seven. Or twenty-one.



The early reflected is
taken care of by the reflected output of the front speakers, and the
reverberant by the surround speakers on delay. All of this in an effort
to
correct the SPATIAL part of the playback. The TEMPORAL will be contained
in
the recording to whatever extent it was recorded.


Yeah except you can't seperate the direct sound and reflected sound on
the recording and the reflected sound of the listening room is not the
same as the concert hall and the speakers aren't matching the
instruments etc etc etc. Stereo just doesn't work that way.


Oh? How does it work?



It is an aural illusion that relies on phase, SPL and time differences
between the two chanels to encode and decode the spacial cues present
at the original event. Bouncing the sound off the walls screws with
two of those three properties that create the aural illusion an
original acoustic event.



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Default Is flat frequency response desirable?

On Apr 24, 1:09*am, "Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
wrote in ...
On Apr 22, 10:45 am, wrote:
If one had a way, electronics and speakers etc. to fill a hall with
sound, and the played any stereo recording of any orchestral work, it
still wouldn't in any significant way sound like the original
performance, so how and why would it do so in any listening room using
any speaker system (under the sun)?


This is another misunderstanding of the system. We aren't always and only
trying to transport the listener to the concert hall. With binaural we are,
yes, but not with field-type systems. It's a sort of continuum in which we
might try for that effect (like with classical sometimes) and we might just
sometimes want to transport the performance to our listening room.

That is exactly what Edgar Vilchur was doing with his live vs recorded demos
at A.R. If you close-mike an instrument and play it back next to the real
instrument, you can fool the listener quite easily, because both sounds take
on the acoustics of the playback space. If you do that with several
instruments, then arrange the speakers in similar geometric positions, you
can have a little "player orchestra," something like a player piano -
perhaps the ultimate in electronic realism!


Not quite sure if this is for my benefit or for general information,
if the former, you are preaching to the choir. Since I'm totally
convinced that no recording can ever transport me into my seat at the
Met, it might as well do something yet better and which it's even more
capable of doing. Use multi-miking, compression, 'spot-lighting' and/
or I really coudn't care less whatever trick it requires, but allow me
the chance of better listening to the musically significant part of
any performance. This requires clever and intelligent engineering, and
thankfully in more recent times, (and BTW no thanks to MCH) I'm
hearing more of this.

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