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They never come out and say that you are required to do anything. You just notice later on with measurements that things are a little off.
Ah, well if we're talking accuracy, Audyssey makes small mistakes too so that's nothing new. I always even up the LCR distances manually with a laser tape measure.
 
Ah, well if we're talking accuracy, Audyssey makes small mistakes too so that's nothing new. I always even up the LCR distances manually with a laser tape measure.
Since it's measuring acoustic delay and not distance, I would not. It's only using a conversion to display "distance". It really needs to be dropped from AVRs to stop confusing users.
 
Since it's measuring acoustic delay and not distance, I would not. It's only using a conversion to display "distance". It really needs to be dropped from AVRs to stop confusing users.
I run my Genelecs through GLM first, so if Audyssey comes out with adjustments that contradict the GLM calibration AND the actual distances, I know which I'm trusting.

Audibly, there isn't usually much difference, but I did catch it dragging the soundstage to the right a little bit once in my current setup. Equalizing the delays fixed it.
 



 
So, for me who never owned a Denon or Marantz, which brand is more quality/is concidered as the step-up? The 50 is indeed very similar to 3800.

I like the design, but not the tiny circle display.
 
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They are essentially same company. Marantz is more luxury brand. The inner of same product lines have been almost identical except HDAM module by Marantz. Better go with Denon, cheaper yet better measured
 
I saw on one of the country pages of Marantz, they offer a total of 5 year warranty if you register your product. Unfortunatley not for North America or Asia, mostly european countries.
 
So, for me who never owned a Denon or Marantz, which brand is more quality/is concidered as the step-up? The 50 is indeed very similar to 3800.

I like the design, but not the tiny circle display.

The price of the 3800+Dirac DLBC may still be cheaper than the Marantz's. Or that $800 difference could be spent on an external amp such as buckeye's 350/500W 8/4 ohms ($749 shipped) Hypex based amp. Would that make your decision a little easier?:)
 
The price of the 3800+Dirac DLBC may still be cheaper than the Marantz's. Or that $800 difference could be spent on an external amp such as buckeye's 350/500W 8/4 ohms ($749 shipped) Hypex based amp. Would that make your decision a little easier?:)
My heart wants RZ50 due to value as well as lower temp than Deno's (?), but impossible to get here. I am still finding 1850 dollar for the 3800 to be too much and still have to pay aditional 199... The historical cost for 3700 was between 1000-1200, so the new jump is hard.

Maybe I just need to keep cool and wait...
 
I run my Genelecs through GLM first, so if Audyssey comes out with adjustments that contradict the GLM calibration AND the actual distances, I know which I'm trusting.

Audibly, there isn't usually much difference, but I did catch it dragging the soundstage to the right a little bit once in my current setup. Equalizing the delays fixed it.

The filters created by the GLM utilize DSP in the SAM Genelecs. That adds delay which means the actual distance isn't the distance based on acoustic delay measured by the Audyssey.

I would manually correct delays/distances between front left and right if the soundfield is distorted but otherwise it's better not to decrease the distance to the actual distance afterwards for those GLM Genelecs if you have Genelecs without it or speakers by completely different manufacturers because otherwise your speakers' sound output isn't timed correctly and the soundfield may suffer.
 
The filters created by the GLM utilize DSP in the SAM Genelecs. That adds delay which means the actual distance isn't the distance based on acoustic delay measured by the Audyssey.
I think you're missing the point. The absolute delay is irrelevant. After GLM calibration, the delay for each speaker as measured by Audyssey at the listening position MUST be the same unless GLM did not set its own delays correctly.

TBH last I checked adding notch and shelf filters in GLM does not actually change the amount of delay either, but I'm not sure if that's always the case or not. There is a few ms of delay built into the speakers but it's far less than most other room correction.
 
I think you're missing the point. The absolute delay is irrelevant. After GLM calibration, the delay for each speaker as measured by Audyssey at the listening position MUST be the same unless GLM did not set its own delays correctly.

TBH last I checked adding notch and shelf filters in GLM does not actually change the amount of delay either, but I'm not sure if that's always the case or not. There is a few ms of delay built into the speakers but it's far less than most other room correction.
Yes, the SAM Genelec delay is fixed, 5 ms if I recall. And all calibrated SAM Genelecs in the system should have equal distance after the Audyssey calibration, you are correct in that too.

What I did mean was that if someone has speakers with and without built-in DSP (like me) they should not decrease the distances of the DSP ones to the actual distances. I'm not saying you would do that. But to me it seems that there is confusion among us and some may not understand that the distance determined by Audyssey or some other room correction doesn't always correlate to the actual distance for a reason. As someone said earlier, using term distance is confusing.
 
But to me it seems that there is confusion among us and some may not understand that the distance determined by Audyssey or some other room correction doesn't always correlate to the actual distance for a reason. As someone said earlier, using term distance is confusing.
This is true. It usually comes up in other conversations when discussing Subs. And I agree with the assertions that more ought to be done to educate the user rather than rely on confusing phraseology to define a quirky system.
Distance/Delay, Large/Small, Double Bass... It's not just Audyssey that is to blame.
However, based on the previous and somewhat still reliable paradigm that many users are utilizing passive Speakers, the Distance-to measurement is still largely useful. It is only where a DSP processor is inserted to the chain that this system breaks down.
 
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From https://www.homecinema-fr.com/news-hcfr-denon-les-integres-2022_2023/
 
But you still needed to enter your speaker distances first to get it in the ballpark. Then you need to do a reference level calibration.

I can see it now. People trying to compare Audyssey to Dirac, with no way to level match.
I'm not going to read all 600 pages of that thread but this is on page 8:

People were asking for a way to decrease or increase the level of a channel. This would require level controls upstream of bass management not downstream. You're talking about gain controls for optimizing the in-room response of speakers. DL took care of that already. No further adjustment required by the user. The level values shown in the NAD are just for informational purposes.


 
What? Do we live in the Multiverse where we can have the best of both worlds, old prices and latest tech?

AVR-X4800H is basically an AVR-X8500H without DTS-X PRO, 4 fewer channels, less watts, and no XLR, but has 2 additional sub outs and Dirac if you want it later. Tons of 8500 tech flowed deep down the line-up for this launch, including chipsets in the 4800 that meet or exceed those in the 8500. Value that what you will.

Maybe it's the 6700 that's the ugly duckling here. Providing little more than an extra 2 channels over the 4800 to justify it's existence. If someone were thinking they wanted to buy a 6700 right now, but were on the fence if they really needed 13 speakers, the 4800 suddenly looks like a steal.

If any of these products are out of your own personal financial reach, that matters to no one but you, and others like you. Sound United will continue to fill new homes around the globe with their products, and owners everywhere will continue to want to buy whatever new products they create.
The x4800h is the one that doesn't make since anymore, now that the x3800h has 4 subs out, and Auro 3D. Just looking at the back panel compared to the x3800h, it offers one more HDMI giving it 7 instead of 6 HDMI inputs, it has a extra zone of audio giving it 3 zones for a whole home audio system, 3 triggers outs instead of 1, legacy component and composite video in, and 125w 2 channels driven vs 105w, that's basically a 1db difference in sound output.

x3800h
avr-x3800h_1220x780-3.jpg


x4800h
avr-x4800h_1220x780-3.jpg
 
In the settings menu of current AVC-X?700H models (under firmware) there is a mysterious "Add New Feature" option...

I don't suppose there is any hope that Dirac could be retroactively added via this mechanism?
This (credit goes to @GXAlan for posting the source info) indicates that Dirac updates for the 700 series models and even for the 8500 are unlikely...
Screenshot_20220926-225626_Firefox.jpg
 
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