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Howard Ferstler
 
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Default Ferstler on recording

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92). I also covered the
topic with less depth in my book, The Home Theater
Companion, and much of what follows comes from my contacts
with quite a large number of recording engineers. I also
posted this article in response to a comment in another
thread.

The article draft:

Two-channel purist microphone techniques, that is, those
that minimize the amount of electrical, multi-microphone,
and mixer-related diddling required to make two-channel
recordings, have traditionally come in two different
flavors.

Some adept classical-music engineers prefer the simple,
two-microphone, spaced-array technique often used by
individuals like Marc Aubort in his work for Delos and
Centaur. Others, like Peter McGrath in his work for Audiofon
and Harmonia Mundi USA, also prefer this technique, but with
the option of employing additional support microphones. A
technique like this seems logically sensible, since with
stereo playback the speakers are themselves in a spaced
configuration.

Decades ago, Mercury elaborated on this technique and filled
in the space between the two main microphones with a third -
allowing for a more stable, mixdown-controllable image in
the center. The technique resulted in their vaunted Living
Presence recordings, still admired today for their
soundstaging qualities and sense of stage depth.

A center fill has been used to good effect for some time in
an adapted form for a large number of Decca/-London
record-ings. The highly regarded "Decca Tree," pioneered by
Roy Wallace, perfected by Kenneth Wilkinson, and used by
such Decca engineering notables as John Dunkerley, Stanley
Goodall, James Lock, and Philip Siney, consists of three
omni-directional microphones. Each is attached to the end of
a T-shaped assembly that is suspended above the conductor's
podium. The left/right capsules are about 2 meters apart and
the center unit is about 1.5 meters in front of the axis
between them. The resulting geometry imparts a quite warm
and spacious sound to the recording.

With still wider spacing, the spaced, three-microphone array
has in the past been used by engineer Jack Renner of Telarc.
Many of the classic Telarc releases were products of this
arrangement. When recording large ensembles, Renner often
employs omni-directional microphones, with the left and
right modules up to nine feet on either side of a centrally
posi-tioned one. Keeping the microphones at a
wider-than-usual distance apart minimizes the impact of
comb-filtered interference effects that some individuals
feel color the sound of spaced-array record-ings. Telarc's
most basic recording technique has long been very popular
with a number of knowledgeable listeners and record-review
critics and the company's material has become a benchmark
for many serious music lovers.

Not every spaced-array advocate likes the wide-track
approach, however. Harry Munz, who has recorded some notable
material for Gothic records (many of which have been given
rave reviews by yours truly), often employed a pair of very
high quality omni's spaced only a few feet apart. Actually,
the spacing required for best results will often be
determined by the size of the ensemble to be recorded and
the desired sound-stage spread and focus.

The spaced-microphone arrangement (sometimes supported by
ambience-augmenting microphones located out in the audience
area), whether utilizing a moderate distance between units
or a very wide one, imparts a spacious, open, and sometimes
pleasantly diffuse sound to the music when it is played back
in typical home listening environments. Many
classical-recording enthusiasts in America seem to like
this, particularly if they own speaker systems that present
a very focussed soundstage image. The technique compliments
what truly exemplary soundstaging/imaging speaker systems
such as the Dunlavy Cantatas (reviewed by me in issue 87),
Waveform MC/MC.1 sub/sat systems (reviewed by in issue 84),
and Triad InRoom Silver sub/sat systems (reviewed by me in
issue 93) can deliver.

Not everyone is enthralled by this technique, however.
Dissenters, such as researcher and mathematician Dr. Stanley
Lip****z, have in the past indicated their strong preference
for the coincident or near-coincident,
directional-microphone technique. This is sometimes used by
engineers working for Chesky, Opus 3, Nimbus, Hyperion,
Teldec, Reference Recordings, and on occasion, Delos and
Harmonia Mundi USA, as well as by a number of others.

One configuration, the XY, double-figure-8 approach
(sometimes called the Blumlein array), requires the use of
directional (front/back sensitive, side insensitive)
microphones located extremely close together and aimed at
each flank of the orchestra. By having the direct signals
respond only to level differences, as opposed to the
spaced-array's response mainly to timing differences, this
two-capsule, dipolar-microphone technique insures that the
recorded sound is kept comfortably phase coherent.

Apostles of this and several other "intensity stereo"
techniques believe that any spaced-array microphone
arrangement, be it utilizing two (or three, or more)
microphones, will add annoying, phase-dominated,
comb-filtering effects to the sound. They note that while
the reflected, ambient "hall" sound on any recording should
have a somewhat diffuse and phase-dominated quality, the
"direct" sound that is coming from the ensemble itself
should be coherent and lacking in the time-of-arrival,
phase-difference anomalies that a spaced-microphone
configuration will by its very nature produce.

They point out that piano recordings are particularly prone
to bloating and indistinct focus when recorded with a spaced
technique, as evidenced by numerous examples that give the
impression that the piano is twenty feet long or that the
keyboard is spread out between the speakers. They also claim
that coincident-source recordings have the ability to
project a valid front-to-back depth with any type of
ensemble or solo instrument that spaced-microphone
recordings can imperfectly fake - but cannot duplicate.
Finally, with small-ensemble performances, they claim that
left-to-right sound-stage imaging is going to be more
accurate with coincident techniques, particularly when
listening from the audiophile-preferred, central "sweet
spot."

Phase problems and the nature of a proper sound-stage
presentation are only part of the ongoing debate about
microphones and their placement for two-channel recordings.
Supporters of the coincident technique note that central-ly
located images (usually involving soloists) are more sharply
focussed. Spaced-array enthusiasts will counter that
although the central and near-central images produced by
their technique may be more diffuse and less stable when
listening from the sweet spot than what is possible with
coincident-pickup techniques, the negative effects can be
minimized by using the previously noted blended center
microphone. Accent microphones on individual instruments can
possibly do an even better job of leveling the playing
field.

What's more, they point out that the result-ing lack of
sweet-spot listening tightness with central, half-left, and
half-right images that can show up with spaced-microphone
techniques is subjectively no worse that what is often
encountered in a typical, live classical perfor-mances -
even ones happening in excellent concert halls. In those
live-music situations pinpoint imaging is impossible to
experience for anyone but the person conducting the
orchestra.

Spaced-microphone advocates will point out that their
favored technique ensures that under home-listening
conditions, sound-stage images will be less likely to shift
radically toward the nearer speaker if the listener moves
away from the central sweet spot, making recordings made
that way more suitable for social listening. As they see it,
coincident-source microphone recordings require that
"serious" listening be done from a small, central area if
full advantage is to be taken of what that technique offers.
Only one person gets to experience the recording at its
best, with everybody else in the room getting a substandard
sound stage.

Most spaced-array advocates feel that even though the direct
signals produced by the technique are less phase coherent
than those which result from coincident-source practices,
the net result is more subjectively realistic when
experienced in a typical home-listening environment. Spaced
speakers and spaced microphones complement each other. In
addition, a few enthusiasts claim that spaced-array
techniques, although ideally not in the same purest-oriented
class as coincident-microphone practices, allow the
recording engineer to do a more customized job of dealing
with concert-hall size, shape, and reflectivity
deficiencies, particularly with large-ensemble recordings.

Perhaps some kind of compromise is in order, and to this
effect a number of other recording engineers and astute
listeners swear by variations on the two basic techniques.
The technical people at Nimbus records, for instance, made a
point of combining the coincident technique with Ambisonic
surround process-ing. Although not very well known in the
USA, with proper decoding, this British system supposedly
can simulate a reasonably accurate concert-hall environment.
The Soundfield, four-capsule microphone used with this kind
of recording process was originally designed with Ambisonic
recording in mind.

Some experts try to compromise between the spaced- and
coincident-array techniques by using the French-pioneered
"ORTF," or the Dutch "NOS," near-coincident systems. The
former places outward-angled, directional microphones only a
few inches apart, while the NOS technique uses somewhat
wider spacing and a slightly wider pickup angle between the
microphone capsules. (The individual microphones are
cardioid models that have progressively weaker sensitivity
as the recording angle widens, until there is a near null
directly behind the capsule.) The result is quasi-coincident
behavior at lower frequencies, due to the long wavelengths
involved, with shorter-wavelength frequencies from the
midrange on up being given enough of an inter-channel time
delay to impart a degree of spaced-array openness to the
sound.

With large-ensemble recordings, even engineers dedicated to
spaced-array and/or coincident-source techniques usually end
up augmenting their main-pickup configura-tion with
addi-tional micro-phones out in the audience area to pick up
ambiance. Others may flank the main array with widely spaced
microphones, in order to highlight the left and right sides
of the orchestra or add "bloom" to the sound. The degree of
enhancement can be adjusted later, during the editing
sessions.

In addition, many engineers, even those with the purist of
motivations, use additional pickups near particularly
hard-to-record instruments or vocalists to make them more
audible in the final mix. Ironically, this is one way to
reduce the dynamic range of a recording, because instruments
that are difficult to hear with fully purist techniques -
and difficult to hear during live performances, too, for
that matter - are increased in level to make them more
audible during home-playback situations.

Practices of this kind are almost mandatory if the hall in
which the recording is being made has acoustic deficiencies.
Recording engineer John Eargle, who has made many superior
recordings for both Delos and ProArte (and who is a
specialist in the ORTF technique), is particu-larly well
known for his ability to modify orthodox procedures to
compensate for hall/orchestra anomalies. He frequently
employs level-adjustable, spaced-omni microphones well off
to the sides of his main ORTF array to add a controllable
amount of spaciousness to his record-ings.

Craig Dory, of Dorian, is also well known for his innovative
microphone techniques, as are Keith Johnson of Reference
Recordings, Ralph Couzens of Chandos, Bob Katz of Chesky,
Paul Goodman when he was working for RCA, and John McClure
when he was working for Columbia. Notable freelance
classical engineers such as Tony Faulkner, Ben Connellan,
Mike Clements, Mike Hatch, Don Hartridge, Christopher
Greenleaf, and Jonathan Stokes are also masters of purist
innovation, as were renowned Decca engineers John Dunkerley,
John Pellow, and Simon Eadon.

Needless to say, not every recording engineer is enamored of
simple, or semi-simple, microphone techniques, be they
spaced-array or coincident. Many recent classical releases
by Decca/-London have been masterpieces of advanced
multi-microphone tech-niques, and Jac Holzman, founder of
Elektra and Nonesuch, pioneered the intelligent use of
multi-microphone techniques for classical material in the
1950s and 1960s.

Deutsche Grammophon has used as many as 32 channels to
record a symphonic work, mixing their inputs down to 2
channels by deftly blending the total. Columbia and Sony
have also made a large number of multi-microphone classical
recordings. While the results of heavy-handed
multi-microphone use by these and a few other companies have
sometimes been disappointing, a fair number of such
rigorously controlled record-ings, even classical ones,
sound quite good. And of course, some pop transcriptions
have sounded downright spectacular.

Indeed, in the pop-music realm, multiple microphones and
elaborate mixing techniques are the norm. Recording
engineers such as Ed Cherney, Frank Filipetti, Chip Davis,
George Massenburg, Roger Nichols, Hugh Padgham, Bill Schnee,
Alan Sides, Bruce Swedien, and Al Schmitt are past masters
of multi-microphone usage. And of course, during the 1950s,
60s, and 70s, Bill Putnam and his Universal Recording
Company set the standard for refined pop-recording
techniques for a generation. Ironically, the use of multiple
microphones and complex mixers has allowed some pop-music
engineers to move ahead of their classical counterparts in
some respects, because those technologies lend themselves so
well to the creation of discrete-channel surround-sound
recordings.

With classical music, steely, harsh-sounding violins are the
most conspicuous indication that the multiple-microphone
technique has been executed incorrectly, because the
procedure nearly always puts the directional microphones
close to the direct field of the violins. When this is done,
the mellow, mostly off-axis blend of the sound that reaches
an audience during a live concert may not be properly
reproduced. Correctly locating a micro-phone for the best
blend can be a time-consuming job, because the unit must be
placed in that part of the direct field that most closely
simulates the reverberant sound encountered at a live
concert.

Many multi-capsule classical record-ings also come across as
one-dimensional sounding because proper timing clues are not
reproduced. Sounds picked up by microphones placed very
close to instru-ments at the rear of the orchestra are added
to the mix simulta-neously with close-miked sounds picked up
from instruments at the front. However, at a live concert
the rear-most sounds arrive later than those from up front,
which is one of several ways that we sense the depth of the
orchestra. In addition, at a live concert the sounds coming
from the rear of an orchestra tend to generate a more
reverberant soundfield and blend than what is produced up
front. This also aids the listener in sensing depth. It is
difficult to simulate these effects with multi-miking,
although individual-track, digital-delay systems can help.

Nevertheless, given that time-delay phase artifacts and
levels can be precisely controlled during the mixing
process, when placed under skillful control,
multi-microphone techniques can do a remarkable job of
simulating an "intensity-stereo" recording. Indeed, the
technique can greatly reduce many of the phase problems
disliked by coinci-dent-source advo-cates - while still
allowing the kind of final control that recording engi-neers
and produc-ers (and sometimes even conductors) can feel
comfortable with.

Whether the use of scads of microphones and extremely
complex mixing consoles will be the norm as the world of
hi-fi sound reproduction further advances into the realm of
surround sound is a question that nobody can answer right
now. It is likely that at the very least a center-channel
microphone, in combination with hall-ambiance microphones
will become mandatory, as will careful post-production
mixing. For better or worse, it appears certain that the era
of absolutely pure two-channel recording techniques is all
but over.

Howard Ferstler
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Robert Morein
 
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"The Milkman" wrote in message
...
Howard "The Plagiarist" Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).


Who wrote it?

The article has so many mistakes it would be difficult to attribute to any
one individual.


  #3   Report Post  
Tim Brown
 
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Howard Ferstler wrote in message ...
The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

[snip]

Howard,

I thought you had given up on this newsgroup. It seemed you did give
up for a few months and did something more useful with your time. But
now you're back feeding the denizens. You seem smart enough to realize
they haven't changed one bit in the last 10+ years. Perhaps you should
take up something less harmful and addictive, like tobacco.

TB
  #5   Report Post  
Bruce J. Richman
 
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Sander deWaal wrote:

(Tim Brown) said:

Howard,


I thought you had given up on this newsgroup. It seemed you did give
up for a few months and did something more useful with your time. But
now you're back feeding the denizens. You seem smart enough to realize
they haven't changed one bit in the last 10+ years. Perhaps you should
take up something less harmful and addictive, like tobacco.


Well well.......and what makes *you* come back and play in here, hm?

--
Sander deWaal
"SOA of a KT88? Sufficient."








As illustrated by his typically nasty post, an insatiable desire to smear
others.



Bruce J. Richman





  #6   Report Post  
Lionel
 
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Bruce J. Richman wrote:
Sander deWaal wrote:


(Tim Brown) said:


Howard,


I thought you had given up on this newsgroup. It seemed you did give
up for a few months and did something more useful with your time. But
now you're back feeding the denizens. You seem smart enough to realize
they haven't changed one bit in the last 10+ years. Perhaps you should
take up something less harmful and addictive, like tobacco.


Well well.......and what makes *you* come back and play in here, hm?

--
Sander deWaal
"SOA of a KT88? Sufficient."









As illustrated by his typically nasty post, an insatiable desire to smear
others.



Bruce J. Richman
Limited Psychologist


I assume that most of the people on RAO know better than to take
anything seriously that come from people like Bruce J. Richman, who
enters RAO just to engage in smear campaigns.
  #8   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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The Milkman wrote:

Howard "The Plagiarist" Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).


Who wrote it?

----------
I Deliver.


I defy you to find any source, anywhere, written by anyone
else, that says what I said in that draft.

Did you read it at all? Give it a go and maybe you will
learn something.

Howard Ferstler
  #9   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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Robert Morein wrote:

"The Milkman" wrote in message
...
Howard "The Plagiarist" Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).


Who wrote it?

The article has so many mistakes it would be difficult to attribute to any
one individual.


Details. Interject some rebuttals within the text that I
posted that show that you know what you are saying and are
not generating noise.

Howard Ferstler
  #10   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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Tim Brown wrote:

Howard Ferstler wrote in message ...
The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

[snip]

Howard,

I thought you had given up on this newsgroup.


I did not give up. I just left for a while to get some
projects completed. I even backed off on my magazine writing
for a while. The result is a second AV room that is almost
as good as my main room. I will do most of my product
reviewing in there from now on, because it is easier to do
AB testing and it is also easier to hook up hardware. The
main room's system is so built in that I do not like to mess
with its hookups.

It seemed you did give
up for a few months and did something more useful with your time.


Yep. Major home improvements: new, expanded second AV room,
new flooring throughout the house, new appliances,
refurbished garage, new deck, and an addition to my
woodworking shop out back. Actually, I still need to replace
all the interior doors with designs that my wife prefers to
the old doors, and I also will probably add still another
addition to the woodworking shop. Need space for still more
tools.

But
now you're back feeding the denizens.


Well, let's at least hope they choke on the cuisine.

You seem smart enough to realize
they haven't changed one bit in the last 10+ years.


Yep, most are still dumb as posts, and oblivious to what
really matters with high-fidelity audio equipment.

Perhaps you should
take up something less harmful and addictive, like tobacco.

TB


Good point, although I will pass on the tobacco thing. Yep,
jousting with the RAO crazies is kind of a waste of time.
Realize, however, that I did not generate the "Ferstler on
recording" draft *just* for these guys, or any of the more
sensible RAO readers, either. It had already been published
in issue 92 of The Sensible Sound and it was easy to copy it
from my draft files in Word and post it here. Well, I did
have to clean up some of the weird hyphenating that showed
up after I blocked and dropped it.

Yes, most of the people hear are goofballs and audio morons,
with a few con artists to leaven the mix. Yet, not everyone
is that way (you, for instance), and it is very possible
that some intelligent newcomers will catch my drift and
realize just how corrupt some of these so-called audio
freaks happen to be.

I am currently writing a new article (for print publication)
and one of its themes will be how people like what we have
here on RAO (a combination of goofy true believers,
desperate store clerks, and tweako journalists using assumed
names) have come close to destroying serious audio as a
serious hobby. Well, Best Buy, Circuit City, and home
theater have done their share, too, but the goofballs have
done their share of polluting.

Howard Ferstler


  #11   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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Howard Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92). I also covered the
topic with less depth in my book, The Home Theater
Companion, and much of what follows comes from my contacts
with quite a large number of recording engineers. I also
posted this article in response to a comment in another
thread.

The article draft:


(SNIP for convenience)

Hey, did ANY of you guys read the damned article?

Howard Ferstler
  #12   Report Post  
MINe 109
 
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In article ,
Howard Ferstler wrote:

Robert Morein wrote:

"The Milkman" wrote in message
...
Howard "The Plagiarist" Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

Who wrote it?

The article has so many mistakes it would be difficult to attribute to any
one individual.


Details. Interject some rebuttals within the text that I
posted that show that you know what you are saying and are
not generating noise.


You post the same article six times amd you're complaining of noise?
  #13   Report Post  
Marc Phillips
 
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Howard said:

Howard Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92). I also covered the
topic with less depth in my book, The Home Theater
Companion, and much of what follows comes from my contacts
with quite a large number of recording engineers. I also
posted this article in response to a comment in another
thread.

The article draft:


(SNIP for convenience)

Hey, did ANY of you guys read the damned article?


Are you starting to get it, dumbass? You have no credibility.

Boon
  #14   Report Post  
Bruce J. Richman
 
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Sander de Waal wrote:


(Bruce J. Richman) said:

(Tim Brown)


Well well.......and what makes *you* come back and play in here, hm?


As illustrated by his typically nasty post, an insatiable desire to smear
others.


I wonder what mechanism makes these people who are absolutely not
interested in exchanging subjective opinions about audio, come to RAO.

As per the charter, RAO is intended for subjective discussions about
audio.


Very true.

For example, if I put my two cats on top of my speakers and it sounds
better to me, I should be able to state such without needing to offer
objective proof to anyone.


An opinion forum certainly doesn't need people to provide evidence about what
are clearly opinions, and not statements of fact, per se. Those that request
"proof" of what others are saying are just using another negative tactic to try
and intimidate those with whom they disagree. It's just a thinly disguised
attempt to try and attack the messenger rather than simply disagree with the
message.







The most difficult part would be to keep the respective cats in said
place, of course.
Anyone know a method for that, other than superglue? :-)

--
Sander deWaal
"SOA of a KT88? Sufficient."








Bruce J. Richman



  #15   Report Post  
Lionel
 
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Bruce J. Richman wrote:
Sander de Waal wrote:



(Bruce J. Richman) said:


(Tim Brown)


Well well.......and what makes *you* come back and play in here, hm?


As illustrated by his typically nasty post, an insatiable desire to smear
others.


I wonder what mechanism makes these people who are absolutely not
interested in exchanging subjective opinions about audio, come to RAO.

As per the charter, RAO is intended for subjective discussions about
audio.



Very true.


For example, if I put my two cats on top of my speakers and it sounds
better to me, I should be able to state such without needing to offer
objective proof to anyone.



An opinion forum certainly doesn't need people to provide evidence about what
are clearly opinions, and not statements of fact, per se. Those that request
"proof" of what others are saying are just using another negative tactic to try
and intimidate those with whom they disagree. It's just a thinly disguised
attempt to try and attack the messenger rather than simply disagree with the
message.


My opinion is that Bruce J. Richman is senile and incontinent.

I don't need particular competences nor evidences.
"Those that request "proof" of what others are saying are just using
another negative tactic to try and intimidate those with whom they
disagree."

:-)


The most difficult part would be to keep the respective cats in said
place, of course.
Anyone know a method for that, other than superglue? :-)

--
Sander deWaal
"SOA of a KT88? Sufficient."









Bruce J. Richman
Limited Psychologist




  #17   Report Post  
Sander deWaal
 
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Howard Ferstler said:

(SNIP for convenience)


Hey, did ANY of you guys read the damned article?


LOL!!!!!!!
I've saved it for the moment I start to suffer from insomnia.

--
Sander deWaal
"SOA of a KT88? Sufficient."
  #18   Report Post  
Bruce J. Richman
 
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Sander de Waal wrote:


Howard Ferstler said:

(SNIP for convenience)


Hey, did ANY of you guys read the damned article?


LOL!!!!!!!
I've saved it for the moment I start to suffer from insomnia.

--
Sander deWaal
"SOA of a KT88? Sufficient."







Not all of us use $ 1000 bills to wipe with. Ferstler's propaganda can serve
the same purpose.


Bruce J. Richman



  #19   Report Post  
Bruce J. Richman
 
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The Milkman wrote:


Howard Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

Who wrote it?

----------
I Deliver.


I defy you to find any source, anywhere, written by anyone
else, that says what I said in that draft.


Somebody is saying that the 'references' section of your novels can
take up to 50% of the entire contents!

Did you read it at all?


Oh.. is it meant to be read?

What is it.. a horror story?

The price of these so-called books are coming down to a level where it
might be worth buying one just to throw it away, or defecate on it ;-)
One went on Ebay a while back for 50c.



----------
I Deliver.








Toilet tissue is easier to use and sometimes even cheaper.



Bruce J. Richman



  #20   Report Post  
Tim Brown
 
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Sander deWaal wrote in message . ..

As per the charter, RAO is intended for subjective discussions about
audio.


How releived I am to see that that's what you're doing:

Sander deWaal wrote in message . ..

LOL, mr. sockpuupett Midias.
In a proper administerererred DBT, you wouldn't know the, difference
between cat's and dog's , let alone whallybees unless its raining, or
my name is Schickelgruber.


Don't criticize me when you, Middius et. al. rarely talk about audio.

TB

p.s. Tubes are disappearing! Their last widespread application, CRT's,
are fading fast. All that's left are special industrial apps. Take
this from a person who knows what a 6GH8 is. HEXFETs are the future of
audio!


  #21   Report Post  
Clyde Slick
 
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"George M. Middius" wrote in message
news


Typical of you sockpuppet's to, play the classical card when Mr.Aktinons
its like you know I can't afford to spend money I already, gave to my
tithing's for church, LOt"S! ;-)


Been there, done that.


  #22   Report Post  
Clyde Slick
 
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"The Milkman" wrote in message
...
Howard Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

Who wrote it?

----------
I Deliver.


I defy you to find any source, anywhere, written by anyone
else, that says what I said in that draft.


Somebody is saying that the 'references' section of your novels can
take up to 50% of the entire contents!

Did you read it at all?


Oh.. is it meant to be read?

What is it.. a horror story?

The price of these so-called books are coming down to a level where it
might be worth buying one just to throw it away, or defecate on it ;-)
One went on Ebay a while back for 50c.

I couldn't find any previous listings. There are four unsold
and unbid current listings. These specs (of his Home
Theater Companion book) are interesting:

Size
Height: 9.5 in.
Width: 8.0 in.
Thickness: 1.0 in.
Weight: 28.8 oz.
Distortion 93.28%
Plagiarism 42.49%

Not bad, eh?


  #24   Report Post  
paul packer
 
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The price of these so-called books are coming down to a level where it
might be worth buying one just to throw it away, or defecate on it ;-)
One went on Ebay a while back for 50c.



You got a bargain there.
  #25   Report Post  
Tim Brown
 
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Sander deWaal wrote in message . ..

I bet my audio posts outweigh yours by a margin of 100:1.
Google is your friend!


And your garbage posts outweigh mine by 10000:1.

BTW what's the mu of a 6GH8?


According to my dog-eared RCA Receiving Tube Manual (1973 printing)
the triode section mu is 46.

TB


  #27   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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The Milkman wrote:

Howard Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

Who wrote it?

----------
I Deliver.


I defy you to find any source, anywhere, written by anyone
else, that says what I said in that draft.


Somebody is saying that the 'references' section of your novels can
take up to 50% of the entire contents!

Did you read it at all?


Oh.. is it meant to be read?

What is it.. a horror story?

The price of these so-called books are coming down to a level where it
might be worth buying one just to throw it away, or defecate on it ;-)
One went on Ebay a while back for 50c.

----------
I Deliver.


Deliver what? And what are your books selling for these
days, slick?

Howard Ferstler
  #28   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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"Bruce J. Richman" wrote:

Toilet tissue is easier to use and sometimes even cheaper.

Bruce J. Richman


You seem to have an opinion here, Richman. Does this mean
that you read the article I posted, or are you just behaving
like a witty little parrot and joining your friends in
lampooning?

Howard Ferstler
  #29   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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MINe 109 wrote:

In article ,
Howard Ferstler wrote:

Robert Morein wrote:

"The Milkman" wrote in message
...
Howard "The Plagiarist" Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

Who wrote it?

The article has so many mistakes it would be difficult to attribute to any
one individual.


Details. Interject some rebuttals within the text that I
posted that show that you know what you are saying and are
not generating noise.


You post the same article six times amd you're complaining of noise?


Was it six? Man, was I not a busy guy there for a while.
Anyway, gotta make sure that everyone has a chance to read
it.

The interesting thing is that you goofballs seem to be
unable to deal with me on any level. You flop when it comes
to swapping insults, and you bog down completely when I post
something of substance and ask for opinions or rebuttals.

Most of you are so stupid when it comes to what is going on
with audio gear and the environments it is located in that
you inevitably revert to digressions or insults.

I really do not believe that most of you can be educated.

Howard Ferstler
  #30   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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"George M. Middius" wrote:

Brother Horace starches and irons his cowl.

Hey, did ANY of you guys read the damned article?


Don't take it personally, Harold. Anybody who's as tedious and
long-winded as you are would get the same treatment.


But you did not answer the question. Did you read the
article?

Next question: did you understand it?

Howard Ferstler


  #31   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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Marc Phillips wrote:

Howard said:

Howard Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92). I also covered the
topic with less depth in my book, The Home Theater
Companion, and much of what follows comes from my contacts
with quite a large number of recording engineers. I also
posted this article in response to a comment in another
thread.

The article draft:


(SNIP for convenience)

Hey, did ANY of you guys read the damned article?


Are you starting to get it, dumbass? You have no credibility.

Boon


But did you read the article?

Next question: did you understand it?

I think it went right over your head, just as when I posted
the previous article draft.

Consequently, the best you can do is digress and post
insults.

Howard Ferstler
  #32   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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Sander deWaal wrote:

Howard Ferstler said:

(SNIP for convenience)


Hey, did ANY of you guys read the damned article?


LOL!!!!!!!
I've saved it for the moment I start to suffer from insomnia.


I have to be curious. Did you at least start to read it and
become somewhat interested in what it said?

I think that you guys are just too stupid to digest the
material and intelligently agree with it or disagree with
it. It went right over your heads. Actually, it did not
conform to the mumbo-jumbo approach to the topic that you
are used to. This also goes for the earlier article draft I
posted.

Howard Ferstler
  #33   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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"Bruce J. Richman" wrote:

Not all of us use $ 1000 bills to wipe with. Ferstler's propaganda can serve
the same purpose.

Bruce J. Richman


Richman, I really do believe that you would not be able to
get half way through the article. Simple and straightforward
as it was, the topic is something you simply could not
comprehend.

Hey, I will give you a chance, Mr. PhD. Read it and deliver
a succinct critique.

Howard Ferstler
  #34   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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Sander deWaal wrote:

Howard Ferstler said:

I have to be curious. Did you at least start to read it and
become somewhat interested in what it said?


To be honest, I glanced over it.
From what I've seen, it's not that unreasonable at all, be it that you
could have said it in probably 200 words instead of 5000.


Obviously, you have a short attention span.

Howard Ferstler
  #35   Report Post  
Bruce J. Richman
 
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Howard Ferstler wrote:


"Bruce J. Richman" wrote:

Toilet tissue is easier to use and sometimes even cheaper.

Bruce J. Richman


You seem to have an opinion here, Richman. Does this mean
that you read the article I posted, or are you just behaving
like a witty little parrot and joining your friends in
lampooning?

Howard Ferstler







Why should I bother to read the obnoxious drivel of a proven purveyor of libel
on Usenet newsgroups? Since you don't have the moral integrity to retract your
false, libelous claims about my professional activities, there is no need to
waste any time in rendering my opinions about anything you have to say.

You just keep insulting people, plagiarizing the work of others, and in
general, ensuring that nobody will take you seriously.



Bruce J. Richman





  #36   Report Post  
Bruce J. Richman
 
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Howard Ferstler wrote:

"Bruce J. Richman" wrote:

Not all of us use $ 1000 bills to wipe with. Ferstler's propaganda can

serve
the same purpose.

Bruce J. Richman


Richman, I really do believe that you would not be able to
get half way through the article. Simple and straightforward
as it was, the topic is something you simply could not
comprehend.

Hey, I will give you a chance, Mr. PhD. Read it and deliver
a succinct critique.

Howard Ferstler








Ferstler, your beliefs are clearly delusional. You believe in libeling others
on Usenet newsgroups and don't have the honesty to issue retractions when
clearly proven wrong.

Your jealousy of those obtaining PhD's is noted. Unfortunately, all you can do
is try and insult others that have earned them.

Try understaning why you are so universally detested before you presume to
make any judgments about others.

Perhaps you can use some of the
"wealth" you like to brag about so much to purchase some insight.






Bruce J. Richman



  #37   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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"Bruce J. Richman" wrote:

Howard Ferstler wrote:


You seem to have an opinion here, Richman. Does this mean
that you read the article I posted, or are you just behaving
like a witty little parrot and joining your friends in
lampooning?


Why should I bother to read the obnoxious drivel of a proven purveyor of libel
on Usenet newsgroups? Since you don't have the moral integrity to retract your
false, libelous claims about my professional activities, there is no need to
waste any time in rendering my opinions about anything you have to say.


Well, you could at least secretly read the article and not
mention what you did to anyone. Heck, it might teach you
something about audio.

You just keep insulting people, plagiarizing the work of others, and in
general, ensuring that nobody will take you seriously.


"Nobody" will take me seriously? Do you really believe that,
Bruce? I can post something here and a day later there will
be a hundred commentaries leading away from my initial
installment.

Howard Ferstler
  #38   Report Post  
Howard Ferstler
 
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"Bruce J. Richman" wrote:

Howard Ferstler wrote:


Hey, I will give you a chance, Mr. PhD. Read it and deliver
a succinct critique.


Ferstler, your beliefs are clearly delusional. You believe in libeling others
on Usenet newsgroups and don't have the honesty to issue retractions when
clearly proven wrong.


Well, that was not particularly succinct.

Your jealousy of those obtaining PhD's is noted.


Bruce, pointing out your intellectual limitations is not
being jealous of people with PhDs.

Unfortunately, all you can do
is try and insult others that have earned them.


Only when they reveal that they are not PhD material, in
spite of the award.

Try understaning why you are so universally detested before you presume to
make any judgments about others.


Universally detested? Gee, Bruce, you need to get out more.
I continue to be amazed that you are supposedly educated.
You behave like a tenth grader with a religious fixation.

Perhaps you can use some of the
"wealth" you like to brag about so much to purchase some insight.


Do you know anything much about audio, Bruce? Rather than
deal with the article, you digress and insult. You are your
own worst enemy on RAO, Bruce.

Howard Ferstler
  #39   Report Post  
Sander deWaal
 
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Howard Ferstler said:

Obviously, you have a short attention span.


That I've mentioned before in this newsgroup.
It's also the reason I don't like movies much.

Strange thing is, when I'm designing and building something, I can be
busy all day and suddenly discover that it's 4.00 in the morning :-)

--
Sander deWaal
"SOA of a KT88? Sufficient."
  #40   Report Post  
MINe 109
 
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In article ,
Howard Ferstler wrote:

MINe 109 wrote:

In article ,
Howard Ferstler wrote:

Robert Morein wrote:

"The Milkman" wrote in message
...
Howard "The Plagiarist" Ferstler wrote:

The following is a draft of an article I published a while
back in The Sensible Sound (issue 92).

Who wrote it?

The article has so many mistakes it would be difficult to attribute to
any
one individual.

Details. Interject some rebuttals within the text that I
posted that show that you know what you are saying and are
not generating noise.


You post the same article six times amd you're complaining of noise?


Was it six? Man, was I not a busy guy there for a while.


It's not like you wrote it six times.

Anyway, gotta make sure that everyone has a chance to read
it.


Or this instead:

http://psbg.emusician.com/ar/emusic_double_pleasure/

The interesting thing is that you goofballs seem to be
unable to deal with me on any level. You flop when it comes
to swapping insults, and you bog down completely when I post
something of substance and ask for opinions or rebuttals.


I don't try to insult you, and it's you that bogs down after substantive
disagreement.

Most of you are so stupid when it comes to what is going on
with audio gear and the environments it is located in that
you inevitably revert to digressions or insults.

I really do not believe that most of you can be educated.


Typical consumers. Whatcha gonna do...
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