Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I picked up a pair of NHT Super Zeroes about six months ago for a very
reasonable price. I had read the glowing stereophile review of these tiny 5" x 9" micro-speakers which likened their sound to loudspeakers costing upwards of eight thousand dollars, and was pleased with the prospect of bringing something into the livingroom which a) cost next to nothing and b) sounded good and which was c) unobtrusive enough to please my aesthetically-minded significant other. In fact she was ecstatic as I lugged the Klipsch Cornwalls down the hallway even going so far as to offer to help. The speakers are being driven with an old beast of an amp, a Technics SU-8099 rated at 120wpc RMS. I've been very pleased with the amplifier with other speakers, it's very neutral sounding and (I thought) drove the horn speakers quite well, not sounding excessively bright or edgy as horn speakers are wont to do. When I first hooked up the speakers (with a powered Velodyne subwoofer), I was astounded at the absolute clarity of the upper midrange, especially on piano. From these little computer-speaker-looking boxes! I listen to a lot of female vocalists and piano and these speakers are designed to reproduce this range admirably. However, now that the honeymoon is over, I am finding them extremely bright. I've never owned a pair of speakers I'd describe as bright although I've read about it enough on this forum and others. Extended listening periods are "fatiguing", another term I've thankfully avoided personal experience with. I've read that this excessive brightness is a trademark of Ken Kantor and NHT, and I wonder about others' experiences. I recently parted with a relatively low-power tube amp, in part because these speakers are only 86 dB/w/m and 20 wpc just wasn't going to do anything for them, but I am wondering about whether or not pairing a "warm" amp with these speakers is going to help. Or is it that the bright sound is just something you like or you don't like? I have tried running the NHT's full-range, using the integrated crossover of a Velodyne sub, and with an active analog crossover. None of these options changed the sound appreciably. I've also seen reference to some wizardry by Bob Carver whereby he was able to make a SS amp sound "tubey", perhaps with the addition of a resistor between the amp and speakers? Dave |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave wrote:
I picked up a pair of NHT Super Zeroes about six months ago for a very reasonable price. I had read the glowing stereophile review of these tiny 5" x 9" micro-speakers which likened their sound to loudspeakers costing upwards of eight thousand dollars, and was pleased with the prospect of bringing something into the livingroom which a) cost next to nothing and b) sounded good and which was c) unobtrusive enough to please my aesthetically-minded significant other. In fact she was ecstatic as I lugged the Klipsch Cornwalls down the hallway even going so far as to offer to help. The speakers are being driven with an old beast of an amp, a Technics SU-8099 rated at 120wpc RMS. I've been very pleased with the amplifier with other speakers, it's very neutral sounding and (I thought) drove the horn speakers quite well, not sounding excessively bright or edgy as horn speakers are wont to do. When I first hooked up the speakers (with a powered Velodyne subwoofer), I was astounded at the absolute clarity of the upper midrange, especially on piano. From these little computer-speaker-looking boxes! I listen to a lot of female vocalists and piano and these speakers are designed to reproduce this range admirably. However, now that the honeymoon is over, I am finding them extremely bright. I've never owned a pair of speakers I'd describe as bright although I've read about it enough on this forum and others. Extended listening periods are "fatiguing", another term I've thankfully avoided personal experience with. I've read that this excessive brightness is a trademark of Ken Kantor and NHT, and I wonder about others' experiences. If the speakers themselves are 'bright', or (as may actually be the case; does anhyone have a good set of anaechoic measurements for the SuperZeros?) the geometry of room/listener produces a 'bright' sound at the listening position, the best bet is to apply room treatment and DSP 'room correction', rather than getting a new amp. Any amp 'warm' enough to tamp down a 'bright' speaker, must have a rather poor frequency response. -- -S A wise man, therefore, proportions his belief to the evidence. -- David Hume, "On Miracles" (1748) |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
My first suggestion would be to try nudging the treble control on your
amp down a bit. Does it sound better? If so, consider investing in a decent equalizer that will let you adjust things more precisely to your liking. Also, what's the room look like? I realize that formal room treatment is not going to sit well with the SO. But a plush rug on the floor, some heavy drapes, maybe a little more upholstery (or more strategically placed upholstery) might help. The one thing that won't help you is a new solid-state amp. A tube amp might help, if you can afford one powerful enough for your speakers, but it's only going to help because it's doing what an equalizer can do much better--roll off the highs. bob |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 14, 6:21*pm, "Dave" wrote:
snip When I first hooked up the speakers (with a powered Velodyne subwoofer), I was astounded at the absolute clarity of the upper midrange, especially on piano. *From these little computer-speaker-looking boxes! *I listen to a lot of female vocalists and piano and these speakers are designed to reproduce this range admirably. *However, now that the honeymoon is over, I am finding them extremely bright. *I've never owned a pair of speakers I'd describe as bright although I've read about it enough on this forum and others. Extended listening periods are "fatiguing", another term I've thankfully avoided personal experience with. *I've read that this excessive brightness is a trademark of Ken Kantor and NHT, and I wonder about others' experiences. Have you tried reducing the treble a bit? I recently parted with a relatively low-power tube amp, in part because these speakers are only 86 dB/w/m and 20 wpc just wasn't going to do anything for them, but I am wondering about whether or not pairing a "warm" amp with these speakers is going to help. *Or is it that the bright sound is just something you like or you don't like? *I have tried running the NHT's full-range, using the integrated crossover of a Velodyne sub, and with an active analog crossover. *None of these options changed the sound appreciably. I've also seen reference to some wizardry by Bob Carver whereby he was able to make a SS amp sound "tubey", perhaps with the addition of a resistor between the amp and speakers? Dave Steven's room-treatment suggestion is well worth considering. You might want to read some suggestions by Ethan Winer at his website: http://www.ethanwiner.com/acoustics.html Changing amplifiers to correct frequency response problems sounds like a very inefficient approach here. You also should be wary of amplifiers that provide "warmth" or similar effects which often imply soft clipping. Such an approach may be good for electric guitars but many listeners would not find the end results pleasing on other types of recordings. |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Please note the snippages (done for maximum and possibly unfair
effect) and the interpolations. On Oct 14, 6:21*pm, "Dave" wrote: *I had read the glowing {{stereophile}} review of these tiny 5" x 9" micro-speakers which likened their sound to loudspeakers costing upwards of eight thousand dollars snip * What you have is essentially two tweeters in a box. Or, at best, a tweeter and upper-upper midrange. It's gonna sound bright. It can't help it. Klipsch Cornwalls * Not so bad speakers. Horns tend to be a bit directional, but otherwise not so bad. And at least reasonably full-range. Big. Technics SU-8099 rated at 120wpc RMS. NOTE: Within normal operating range, the *amp* should not affect the sound. Around the margins (at/near clipping) amps will sound different one-from-another depending on lots of factors, but within normal operating range, not so much. *However, now that the honeymoon is over, I am finding them extremely bright. * Yep. See "gonna be bright" above. *I have tried running the NHT's full-range, using the integrated crossover of a Velodyne sub, and with an active analog crossover. *None of these options changed the sound appreciably. Nope. Can't get much midrange out of a sub-woofer and two tweeters... And it is not so much that the speakers are "bright" as the entire middle is missing leaving you with _only_ the bright. And, sadly, that is about the size of it, pun intended. With all due respect to NHT I will offer, with some humor, the the designers, now 20+ years after the company started have lost their upper range of hearing and so are compensating by designing mosquito speakers. That Stereophile should be taken in by it is more-or-less typical of that aspect of the industry. Speakers are about moving air. The lower the frequency, the more air that needs to be moved. Tiny little drivers cannot move that kind of air without heroic measures - and horns are one way of achieving such measures (your Cornwalls) - but conventional cone drivers are not. You can muddy the waters (de-bright the speakers) using an equalizer, a tube amp driven to clipping or other silly measures, but you cannot add back the vast midrange that is missing, will continue to be missing and cannot be 'added' with the configuration you have. All you can do is skew the bass curve such that it favors the midrange, skew the treble curve so that it favors the midrange - and - well, you get the picture. I keep two sub/sat systems, a Revox Piccolo http://www.hifi.nl/markt/images/6016...O_System_o.jpg and an AR Athena system (made for maybe a week before they were pillaged by Jensen). Both of them have substantial mid-range speakers (6") - so do not suffer from the brightness syndrome - much. But the satellite box is therefore some taller than what you describe, and considerably wider. About 8 x 12 vs. 5 x 9. Still small. The subwoofer is a 16" cube in the case of the Revox, and a 14 x 18 x 10 box for the AR. In any case, you may be dragging those Cornwalls back after all, as you just *won't* get what you want from your present set-up. Or conceal a couple of midrange speakers.... Heroic measures. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#6
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Peter Wieck" wrote in message
... What you have is essentially two tweeters in a box. Or, at best, a tweeter and upper-upper midrange. It's gonna sound bright. It can't help it. Nope. Can't get much midrange out of a sub-woofer and two tweeters... And it is not so much that the speakers are "bright" as the entire middle is missing leaving you with _only_ the bright. And, sadly, that is about the size of it, pun intended. The response of the super zeroes starts to roll of at ~150Hz, reaching -6dB at 88Hz. Is it unreasonable to expect my subwoofer, which can cross over as high as 140Hz, to pick up the slack on the midrange? Of course this is in an anechoic chamber, which my livingroom is certainly NOT. I had a look at the Ethan Winer acoustic treatments site, and I'd like to experiment with room treatments, but the room just isn't built to accomodate... A majority of the space on two walls is windows, another wall is a large mirror above a fireplace, and there is art on most of the remaining walls. Wonder how she'd feel about 4" rigid yellow fiberglass insulation on the whole ceiling? Probably even more unhappy than seeing the Cornwalls moving back down the hallway into the room... |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave wrote:
"Peter Wieck" wrote in message ... What you have is essentially two tweeters in a box. Or, at best, a tweeter and upper-upper midrange. It's gonna sound bright. It can't help it. Nope. Can't get much midrange out of a sub-woofer and two tweeters... And it is not so much that the speakers are "bright" as the entire middle is missing leaving you with _only_ the bright. And, sadly, that is about the size of it, pun intended. The response of the super zeroes starts to roll of at ~150Hz, reaching -6dB at 88Hz. Is it unreasonable to expect my subwoofer, which can cross over as high as 140Hz, to pick up the slack on the midrange? Of course this is in an anechoic chamber, which my livingroom is certainly NOT. With a crossover that high, you stand a good chance of hearing where the sub is, rather than it being 'invisible'. If so, experiment with lower crossovers and see how much 'mid suckout' occurs. You might get lucky. I had a look at the Ethan Winer acoustic treatments site, and I'd like to experiment with room treatments, but the room just isn't built to accomodate... A majority of the space on two walls is windows, another wall is a large mirror above a fireplace, and there is art on most of the remaining walls. But there's still the option of EQ...and that's still a more sensible solution than using an amp as an crude equalizer. If you want to get fancier than just tone controls, you could either investigate an outboard DSP EQ unit, or invest in a modern AV receiver -- particularly one with Audyssey EQ. -- -S A wise man, therefore, proportions his belief to the evidence. -- David Hume, "On Miracles" (1748) |
#8
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Dave" wrote in message
I picked up a pair of NHT Super Zeroes about six months ago for a very reasonable price. I've owned a pair for at least a decade. I don't think their price ever was unreasonable, even when new and bought for MRP. I think you can still pay more for less, despite the tremendous improvements in speaker price/performance in the past 15 years. My SZs get trotted in and out of my speaker closet, as the need comes and goes. I also have a pair of S1s, a pair of 2.5is, and an A10 system. So yes, I went through a NHT phase for about 5 years, ending about 5 years ago. But I'm not soured on them. I had read the glowing stereophile review of these tiny 5" x 9" micro-speakers which likened their sound to loudspeakers costing upwards of eight thousand dollars, Can we all say hyperbole? ;-) and was pleased with the prospect of bringing something into the livingroom which a) cost next to nothing and b) sounded good and which was c) unobtrusive enough to please my aesthetically-minded significant other. I would characterize SZs as being interesting and potentially still useful artifacts of a by-gone era. On the up side SZs are pretty smooth, and obviously very tiny. Their impedance is pretty high and relatively consistent so they are easy on amps, and tend to protect themselves from excess power by not accepting it. On the down side SZs have no real bass. They do have a mild peak in the upper bass which is apparently there to try to add the perception of sonic balance. Because SZs are so physically small, they have almost no directivity control. Therefore, they are very, very dependent on room placement and the room in general. They are inefficient, and don't seem to have a lot of actual power handling capacity. In fact she was ecstatic as I lugged the Klipsch Cornwalls down the hallway even going so far as to offer to help. Cornwalls and SZs are so different as comparing them is almost like an excluded-middle discussion. The speakers are being driven with an old beast of an amp, a Technics SU-8099 rated at 120wpc RMS. I've been very pleased with the amplifier with other speakers, it's very neutral sounding and (I thought) drove the horn speakers quite well, not sounding excessively bright or edgy as horn speakers are wont to do. Well, you're judging horns by Cornwalls, right? Just about any speaker from that era has one sonic failing or another, either dull or edgy. A real ear-opener would be a comparison with a modern SOTA horn-loaded system. There has been about a half-century of technical progress since the Cornwalls were first sold. BTW, it has been a very interesting half-century. ;-) When I first hooked up the speakers (with a powered Velodyne subwoofer), I was astounded at the absolute clarity of the upper midrange, especially on piano. Well, SZs compared to Cornwalls... From these little computer-speaker-looking boxes! The SZ drivers were pretty good in their day. Euro tweeter and Japanese clone of a Euro mid-bass driver, if memory serves. Clever, non-trivial crossover. I listen to a lot of female vocalists and piano and these speakers are designed to reproduce this range admirably. Well yes, female vocalist means you want smooth midrange but no real bass required. However, now that the honeymoon is over, I am finding them extremely bright. (1) Look at speaker placement. SZ's are very dependent on the room because they have about as little directivity control as any serious audio speaker on the market not made by Bose. (2) Look relative placement w/r/t to the subwoofer and also at the crossover with the subwoofer. Close is good. Very close. I've never owned a pair of speakers I'd describe as bright although I've read about it enough on this forum and others. The SZ's are pretty smooth, but they have no real bass. There are actually 2 ways for a speaker to be bright, A is to have raised treble, and B is to have dropping bass. SZs are more B than A. BTW, did I mention the room? The SZ's and the Cornwalls are just about as extremely different as serious Hi Fi speakers can get. The Cornwalls have very well-defined directivity due to the large bass driver and the horns. The SZ's are the exact opposite. The small drivers in the small cabinet guarantee that they are about as omnidirectional as speakers can get without being specifically designed to be omnidirectional. Extended listening periods are "fatiguing", another term I've thankfully avoided personal experience with. I've read that this excessive brightness is a trademark of Ken Kantor and NHT, and I wonder about others' experiences. IMO Ken knows how to design speakers, and NHT's are as rule good-sounding speakers. But SZs are children of the mid-90s, which means that they ave solid response in the upper ranges. A really small speaker has no choice - it either has good response at higher frequencies or it has no response at all because it can't possibly do deep bass without heroics. There's no way that you can separate speakers from the rooms they are in, and there is no way that the wrong speaker for the room is going to sound good right out of the box. I recently parted with a relatively low-power tube amp, in part because these speakers are only 86 dB/w/m and 20 wpc just wasn't going to do anything for them, but I am wondering about whether or not pairing a "warm" amp with these speakers is going to help. To me, tubed amps are often random equalizers. Random, because their actual equalization effect is not engineered for the specific application. Because of their typically high output impedance, tube amp frequency response is strongly altered by the impedance curve of the speakers they drive. This means that speakers with low and variable impedance curves will have a stronger "tube amp warmth" effect than speakers with high and less variable impedance curves. The bad news for tubed amp fans is that the SZ impedance curve is neither very low nor extremely variable. http://www.stereophile.com/loudspeak...04/index9.html Or is it that the bright sound is just something you like or you don't like? It's about the speaker-room interface. If you told me about hardwood floors and sparse furnishings, I would not be the least bit surprised. But that's not the only way to get yourself into trouble with SZs. Put them at the junction of the ceiling and the wall, or worse yet in a ceiling corner, and they probably won't be bright, they may even be boomy and/or have tubby bass. I have tried running the NHT's full-range, using the integrated crossover of a Velodyne sub, and with an active analog crossover. None of these options changed the sound appreciably. SZ's are good speakers to feed through an appropriate high pass filter, because of their non-existent deep bass response and their obvious power-handling limitations. Appropriate = 140 Hz. |
#9
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 15, 12:54*pm, "Dave" wrote:
The response of the super zeroes starts to roll of at ~150Hz, reaching -6dB at 88Hz. *Is it unreasonable to expect my subwoofer, which can cross over as high as 140Hz, to pick up the slack on the midrange? *Of course this is in an anechoic chamber, which my livingroom is certainly NOT. Wonder how she'd feel about 4" rigid yellow fiberglass insulation on the whole ceiling? *Probably even more unhappy than seeing the Cornwalls moving back down the hallway into the room... This is the problem. You have your subwoofer, which *at the extremes* can cross over at 140hz. You have your satellites (and that is what they are, despite any rumors or representations to the contrary) that are pretty much useless (from the published curves) below 150hz. So, singing voice: The following vocal range classifications are typically used in classical music (from highest to lowest): Soprano (240 - 1170 Hz) Mezzo-soprano (220 - 900 Hz) Contralto (130 - 700 Hz) Tenor (130 - 440 Hz) Baritone (110 - 350 Hz) Bass (80 - 330 Hz) Speaking voice: Typical adult male: 85 to 155 Hz Typical adult female: 165 to 255 Hz." Lots of subtlies (coloration) missing, in those frequencies that "fill out" musical sound. Leaving the heavy bass and bright trebles. It is that hole in the middle that is causing you distress, not the excess at either end. That may not be excessive at all, just sounding so due to the lack. And you won't fill the hole with what you have effectively. *ESPECIALLY* as you know better based on your history with the Klipsch speakers. Those who do not know better, those with poor upper-range hearing and so forth may be as pleased as the proverbial purple pig with your set-up. Don't get me started on tiny little bass drivers (or 15" blobs, either). Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#10
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Dave" wrote in message
"Peter Wieck" wrote in message ... What you have is essentially two tweeters in a box. Or, at best, a tweeter and upper-upper midrange. It's gonna sound bright. It can't help it. A little hyperbole? The 4 inch lower range drivers are not full woofers, but they do cover from the mid-bass on up. Nope. Can't get much midrange out of a sub-woofer and two tweeters... And it is not so much that the speakers are "bright" as the entire middle is missing leaving you with _only_ the bright. And, sadly, that is about the size of it, pun intended. Postion SZs in a upper corner or at the junction of the wall and the ceiling and they will even sound a little tubby, as in too much upper bass. The response of the super zeroes starts to roll of at ~150Hz, reaching -6dB at 88Hz. The response also peaks around 150 Hz. Is it unreasonable to expect my subwoofer, which can cross over as high as 140Hz, to pick up the slack on the midrange? Probably not. However, with a 140 Hz crossover, you have to keep the subwoofer and satellites pretty close together if you want a nicely blended bass image. Of course this is in an anechoic chamber, which my living room is certainly NOT. Because SZs are so physically small, they have almost no directivity control. Therefore, they are very, very dependent on room placement and the room in general. Wonder how she'd feel about 4" rigid yellow fiberglass insulation on the whole ceiling? You're basically talking an acoustical tile drop ceiling, and Armstrong has some products with a decorative surface. Under $5 a square foot, if you put it up yourself. |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "Dave" wrote in message I listen to a lot of female vocalists and piano and these speakers are designed to reproduce this range admirably. Well yes, female vocalist means you want smooth midrange but no real bass required. Qualifier: female vocalists accompanying jazz trios/quartets/quintets, etc. often with string bass. So, real bass is required. However, now that the honeymoon is over, I am finding them extremely bright. (1) Look at speaker placement. SZ's are very dependent on the room because they have about as little directivity control as any serious audio speaker on the market not made by Bose. (2) Look relative placement w/r/t to the subwoofer and also at the crossover with the subwoofer. Close is good. Very close. I am open to moving them around somewhat. I moved the sub around a fair bit when I got it as I had heard that the room was likely to have a sweet spot or two for the sub and that sub placement would make a big difference. Unfortunately the location of the sub is such that close placement of the SZs would make for an awkward listening position and unusual aesthetics. Right now, the sound is relatively good at several listening locations, but there is one particlar corner where the bass is enormously accentuated. The SZ's are pretty smooth, but they have no real bass. There are actually 2 ways for a speaker to be bright, A is to have raised treble, and B is to have dropping bass. SZs are more B than A. BTW, did I mention the room? There's no way that you can separate speakers from the rooms they are in, and there is no way that the wrong speaker for the room is going to sound good right out of the box. I am starting to feel that a) the SZ's are a bad match for the room and b) the room in general is going to be a tough nut to crack as far as elimination of standing waves and room modes no matter what I do... your guess as to hardwood floors and sparse furnishings is accurate although there are some thick-pile area rugs and the furniture style is overstuffed cloth-covered. The room is nearly square, about 18'x 20' with coved 9' ceiling. the speakers are about 3' out from the back and sides of the room, the sub is roughly between them and forward of the SZ's by about 2'. To me, tubed amps are often random equalizers. Random, because their actual equalization effect is not engineered for the specific application. I am considering DSP EQ. Do you have an opinion? I don't see how it will fix such a bad room. Given the reflectivity of the majority of the room's surfaces, getting rid of peaks and dips at one location is unlikely to have an identical effect at another... although I am quite sure there is much to the digital wizardry of DSP which I do not comprehend... It's about the speaker-room interface. If you told me about hardwood floors and sparse furnishings, I would not be the least bit surprised. But that's not the only way to get yourself into trouble with SZs. Put them at the junction of the ceiling and the wall, or worse yet in a ceiling corner, and they probably won't be bright, they may even be boomy and/or have tubby bass. What's the BEST location for them? I've described the present location and they are up on stands at seated ear level. Would I be much better off with a full-range loudspeaker in this room, or a full-range plus the subwoofer? The Cornwalls sounded good, but in a very limited area, i.e. they seem to put out about a 30-degree cone of sound and if you're outside it, the image and soundstaging just don't happen. when you move into the adjacent diningroom it's almost like portions of the spectrum disappear. SZ's are good speakers to feed through an appropriate high pass filter, because of their non-existent deep bass response and their obvious power-handling limitations. Appropriate = 140 Hz. I haven't done any measurements, but found that they sound better, at least to my ear, when run full-range. Thank you very much for your informative replies. Dave |
#12
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave wrote:
I've read that this excessive brightness is a trademark of Ken Kantor and NHT, and I wonder about others' experiences. Every NHT speaker I've ever listened to was screechy and unpleasant, especially with classical music. They're like fingernails on a blackboard to me. YMMV, but I doubt you'll improve things by changing out the amp. //Walt |
#13
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave:
I am starting over on this one, with two assumptions - one relating to you, and one a fully acknowledged personal opinion: a) You would really like this configuration to work. b) There is no such thing as a truly 'bad' room. A few technical points with questions first: 1. Standing waves and nodes: Have you experienced these directly and specifically, or is it something that you have "heard-tell of"? Standing waves are caused by either parallel surfaces or domed/ barreled ceilings in conjunction with nearby planar surfaces at the focus-point of the dome or barrel (and, of course, curved niches can cause the same effect). For them to happen anyway takes hard, parallel surfaces at the proper reflection points. So even a simple carpet or area rug will serve to break them up. Or a painting in the right place. Or window curtains - you get the idea - really simple stuff. Putting in an acoustical ceiling is, in a word, nuts. 2. Your satellites should be _against_ a wall, not standing out from it if you want to get any sort of lower-midrange at all out of them. If I read your post correctly, you have them standing away from the walls and not near any corners or edges. Keep in mind that the more you put them to an edge (between wall and floor or wall and ceiling) the more that those surfaces act as a horn. The more you put it at a corner, and then an adge, the horn becomes even narrower, concentrating the sound even more. So, you could experiment by bringing the speakers closer to a corner/closer to an edge, closer to both to see if you hit a spot where the limited lower-midrange is actually enhanced sufficiently to meet your needs without additional heroics or overpowering you with the treble. Do the same thing with the subwoofer. You can really "bring up" the bass by placement, if you think of the geometric center of floor as the 'least bass' position and a floor corner the 'most'. Now, we get into opinion and why 'no bad rooms'. Back in the Day (60s & 70s) Acoustic Research did a little brochure for their customers on Speaker Placement. This was well before "high- end" single-sweet-spot systems became popular, and speaker placement was all about creating a listening *stage* for a listening *area*. Note also that AR pretty much always was into multiple-driver, full- range speakers, and their line limited from the low-end up (based on driver size) while always paying attention to the midrange and highs. Cutting to the chase, they felt that the ideal speaker placement for the average room (3X by 4X by 2.6X being 9 x 12 x 8 or 12 x 16 x 10) with average furnishings and average penetrations (windows and doors) was to have the speakers at just-off (by +/-~1 woofer diameter) the 1/2 and 1/3 points of the long wall with the lower edge of the woofer at least 2 x its diameter above the floor or below the ceiling or away from any corner. They also wanted the speakers against the wall (an exception to this, the 10pi came much later). In other words, they eschewed symmetry. As rooms got larger, they grudgingly allowed placement on the shorter of the two walls, but in the same asymmetrical manner. You might try along these lines. First, your satellites have a dome tweeter and a very shallow cone upper midrange. So, they are pretty wide-dispersion. Putting them against the wall will help concentrate the throw 'forward' and thereby help to locate them and thus the 'stage' they present. In a small way, this will also reduce required amplifier power as you will perceive more sound coming from them if they are against a wall. Then, play around with your bass, treble and crossover (even balance) controls to see if you can sweeten it up and bring back some of that lower-midrange drop-out. Now, 80% of what I wrote above is useless if you already have them against a wall. Lastly: now that you have 'the bug' on satellites, you might look around for a slightly larger 'full range' speaker to use as your satellites. Still small, still SO-friendly as compared to the Cornwalls, but more capable of lower-midrange reproduction. The NHTs can always go in a tiny room somewhere - they would be just fine in that environment. And, even if the fundamental frequencies for the your female voices are all above 150hz, the harmonics extend in both directions such that if they are not available the sound will be discolored. Kinda like the differences between middle A on a violin string or piano or middle A as a sine-wave. Writing for myself, I have used the "AR method" for years with speakers from many different manufactures of many different types from conventional drivers to electrostatics to planar drivers. I find that it works. I find also that when done-right, I can pick out individual instruments and 'point' to them when listening to a well-made recording (or think I can anyway - comes to the same thing). Further, I find that there is no single 'sweet-spot' but more an 'audience area' which makes the experience one that can be shared or one that does not 'require active participation' on my part. I can lie on the couch, sit in a chair, watch the fire (90 degrees to the speakers) and still enjoy the ambience. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#14
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Dave" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I am starting to feel that a) the SZ's are a bad match for the room I agree on the grounds that the room is pretty reverberent and the SZs lack directionality which is key for good sound in a reverberent room. and b) the room in general is going to be a tough nut to crack as far as elimination of standing waves and room modes no matter what I do... I you used the Cornwalls in this room, you were closer to an optimal solution because they are far more directional than the SZs. your guess as to hardwood floors and sparse furnishings is accurate although there are some thick-pile area rugs and the furniture style is overstuffed cloth-covered. From an appearance standpoint, I like that sort of decor. From a SQ standpoint, it is problematical. The room is nearly square, about 18'x 20' with coved 9' ceiling. the speakers are about 3' out from the back and sides of the room, the sub is roughly between them and forward of the SZ's by about 2'. The SZs need to be within maybe 3'-5' of the sub to have anything like good blending through the crossover region. To me, tubed amps are often random equalizers. Random, because their actual equalization effect is not engineered for the specific application. I am considering DSP EQ. Do you have an opinion? Yes, its the best equalization option, but if you really want good sound, you'll work over the room acoustics situation first. I don't see how it will fix such a bad room. It won't fix it, but it may mitigate it somewhat. Given the reflectivity of the majority of the room's surfaces, getting rid of peaks and dips at one location is unlikely to have an identical effect at another... Don't even go down that road. If you attempt to use eq, just go for better sonic balance. although I am quite sure there is much to the digital wizardry of DSP which I do not comprehend... At this point you don't need wizardry, you need meat and potatoes. ;-) It's about the speaker-room interface. If you told me about hardwood floors and sparse furnishings, I would not be the least bit surprised. But that's not the only way to get yourself into trouble with SZs. Put them at the junction of the ceiling and the wall, or worse yet in a ceiling corner, and they probably won't be bright, they may even be boomy and/or have tubby bass. What's the BEST location for them? Within a few feet of the sub. In your context, compromise the position of the sub to get better results with the SZs. I've described the present location and they are up on stands at seated ear level. Would I be much better off with a full-range loudspeaker in this room, or a full-range plus the subwoofer? There's nothing wrong with subs mixed with appropriate speakers. In a highly-reverberent room I'd first choose upper-range speakers that have lots of directivity control, even some of the better, smoother choices from the pro sound market. For example, I might try something like EV ZX1, or ZX5-60 SR speakers with a sub and a parametric equalizer to adjust over-all balance and smooth out the crossover to the sub. That will give you good directivity control, reasonable smoothness, tons of dynamic range and good overall balance. Think of ZX5-60s as Cornwalls for the 21st century. ;-) Seriously, they are almost as efficient and have not that much worse bass extension with equalization, which they can take very easily due their monumental dynamic range. They are far smoother and have far more dynamic range. A high performance sub to extend system response down to 20-30 Hz is a good match. They are far smaller than Cornwalls and therefore might have more WAF. As I recall they displace about the same volume and have about the same weight as AR3s. Their form factor is a little more squat and they are socketed for professional speaker stands. Cornwall: 35.75" H (90.81cm) x 25.31" W (64.29cm) x 15.5" D (39.37cm), 98 pounds. ZX-5: 69.2 x 44.6 x 41.1 cm (27.24" x 17.56" x 16.18") , 49.5 pounds I've had ZX-5 60s in my rather reverberent living room and equed them to suit with good results. The Cornwalls sounded good, but in a very limited area, i.e. they seem to put out about a 30-degree cone of sound and if you're outside it, the image and soundstaging just don't happen. Believe it or not, that may be as good as you'll ever get in terms of coverage. when you move into the adjacent diningroom it's almost like portions of the spectrum disappear. You were expecting better? I would never expect good sound from speakers anywhere, except the room they are in. |
#15
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter Wieck wrote:
Please note the snippages (done for maximum and possibly unfair effect) and the interpolations. On Oct 14, 6:21?pm, "Dave" wrote: ?I had read the glowing {{stereophile}} review of these tiny 5" x 9" micro-speakers which likened their sound to loudspeakers costing upwards of eight thousand dollars snip ? What you have is essentially two tweeters in a box. Or, at best, a tweeter and upper-upper midrange. It's gonna sound bright. It can't help it. 'Bright' due to truly accentuated treble, or simply due to 'flat' treble but lack of bass? Seems to it also depends on how they are designed and 'voiced'. It's certainly possibly to create a 'dull' minimonitor -- or one that is more or less flat (not bright) within the treble range. And where the listener sits has got to have an effect too. Which is why I asked whether anyone has any specs of bench test data on the SuperZeroes. Ah, here we go: http://www.stereophile.com/standloud...04/index8.html NHT SuperZero: two-way, acoustic-suspension minimonitor. Drive-units: 4.5" paper-cone woofer, 1" soft-dome tweeter. Frequency response: 85Hz-25kHz, ?3dB. Crossover frequency & slopes: 2.2kHz, 6 and 12dB/octave. Impedance: 8 ohms nominal, 7.5 ohms minimum. Sensitivity: 86dB/W/m. Power handling: 100W maximum, 15W minimum. bench data: http://www.stereophile.com/standloud...04/index9.html Corey Greenberg loved 'em. John Atkinson attributed a 'forward balance' to them with 'catastrophically lightweight bass' but also notes: "this curve is much smoother than I would have expected from a pair of speakers in this price region, particularly in the treble" and further that "sitting below the speaker tends to compensate for the on-axis forwardness in the upper midrange/low treble. " -- -S A wise man, therefore, proportions his belief to the evidence. -- David Hume, "On Miracles" (1748) |
#16
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Walt wrote:
Dave wrote: I've read that this excessive brightness is a trademark of Ken Kantor and NHT, and I wonder about others' experiences. Every NHT speaker I've ever listened to was screechy and unpleasant, especially with classical music. They're like fingernails on a blackboard to me. I currently use SuperOnes (five of them, when in surround mode), and they sound fine on classical music I play -- everything from Gregorian Chant to Xenakis. It helps to have a thick area rug rather than , say, a wooden floor, in front of them. The room is large with no curtains, but also has some thickly-upholstered furniture. And I use digital room correction. I've used them in a half dozen different rooms and find, not surprisingly, that speaker placement and the acoustic properties of the room have a huge impact on the sound. -- -S A wise man, therefore, proportions his belief to the evidence. -- David Hume, "On Miracles" (1748) |
#17
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Walt" wrote in message
Dave wrote: I've read that this excessive brightness is a trademark of Ken Kantor and NHT, and I wonder about others' experiences. Every NHT speaker I've ever listened to was screechy and unpleasant, especially with classical music. They're like fingernails on a blackboard to me. Fortunately for NHT, several 100,000 people disagreed with their pocketbooks. ;-) Speaking as one of those people, I'll allow as they are about as bright as they ever need to be. ;-) YMMV, but I doubt you'll improve things by changing out the amp. Now that I agree with wholeheartely. Especially true of the SZ's with their amazingly smooth and flat impedance curve. There are speakers that can make a big difference when driven with an amp that has a high output impedance like my Q15s. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
LOST MY MATE TO A KENWOOD SUBWOOFER | Marketplace | |||
FS: Bose Powered Video Room Mate Speakers $75 | Marketplace | |||
FS: Bose Powered Room Mate Speakers [Pic] | Marketplace | |||
Soul mate for a U47? | Pro Audio |