I find the trend of buying audio on internet, playing with it and returning without a serious reason against the purchase cost within 2 weeks immoral.
It's the retailers who have created this 'returns monster' and quite frankly, I have no sympathy.
I've never bought something, played with it, and returned it for no sensible reason.
Do your due diligence before you engage in a contract to purchase, not after.
I won't call it a usual (e.g., generalized) practise here in europe.In the EU, there is a 14 days “cooling off” period to return purchase made on-line for any reason.
SHOPPING ONLINE WITHIN THE EU
If you plan to buy products within the EU, there are a number of rights you are entitled to.op.europa.eu
And it is of course misused. Buy a new DAC, play with it and then return it. Usual practice here.
I am not saying YOU, John, me ...... are doing that. I am only saying I know many people who behave this way and even share their experience through audio forums.I am in France and had never returned anything that was not broken (happened a couple of times in the past 20 years as items were broken).
Most of people I know and have known behave the same.
I agree that this EU regulation tends to be misused and that's a pity.I am not saying YOU, John, me ...... are doing that. I am only saying I know many people who behave this way and even share their experience through audio forums.
I think that is the same case as with many other regulations of the EU Commission. There may be a good intent in the beginning (this time to protect the customer), but it counts with idealized human behaviour. We can see it very often.
How do you approach the advertised “in home trial” approach from companies like Sonos?
I think it can be hard to do all of your due diligence. Option A is the return system which distributes the burden across many consumers, and relies on retailers utilizing return bans for abusers of the policy.
Option B is all sales final, which relies on the retailer passing savings onto the customer that reflects the retailer’s savings from not needing a return policy in place (other than defects).
Last, what if the defect is a software glitch/incompatibility/feature? Option B gets tough if the customer thinks the device is broken and does not perform as advertised but the retailer does not allow the return.
I call that the puppy dog close. Take the puppy home, you'll love it! I never used the puppy dog close because it fills the warehouse with opened boxes.I've never participated/bought anything with an "in-home trial". It's generally a way to lower the buyer's barrier to purchase and they count on a significant proportion of dissatisfied buyers to exceed the trial period or simply accept the product, even though they really didn't want it after using it but couldn't be bothered with the often labyrinthine returns process.
I call that the puppy dog close. Take the puppy home, you'll love it! I never used the puppy dog close because it fills the warehouse with opened boxes.
Pop is such a wide label, but here are some pretty commercial examples produced the last 10 years or so. These are not cherry picked to be especially pristine recordings, and the DR is probably mostly pretty low. But they all still pass the test of sounding better on better systems with flying colors.
It's hard to say how they will sound in a room, but I would also suggest they're probably a bit lean. Forgive me for using my own speakers for comparison, but I will since I know them well, and because I think they have a more correct in-room response in the upper bass / lower mid than many speakers.
We can at least agree that the the Genelecs is leaner, and then it's a larger debate what is most accurate I guess.
Genelec is the dotted one below. Ours would be paired by a sub, so it would typically be extending in a straight line from the start of the roll-off. So the response would be above the dotted line of the Genelec all the way to 20hz. It gives a fuller response, and to me more accurate compared to actual live instruments (which are typically not lean sounding at all).
On-axis:
View attachment 402492
Interesting.
I haven't heard either (smaller Gennies a while back though). The difference is subtle, so we don't consider either speaker to be inaccurate. Since I apply the not-lean B&K 1974 curve to my own loudspeakers (they are also a bit lean in the mid-bass, uncorrected) I expect I'd prefer the Manta plus sub out-of-the-box.
Actually, I was just trying to state the obvious - each system is different and I stand by this statement. No idea why it translated in your head into "snob".The comparison between Atmos mixes is only meaningful if done on a 7.x.4 channel system IMO, because those are the active channels. I presume that’s what you’re using. I am.
I get that you’re trying to make the snob argument, but…just stop. It’s just dumb.
Actually quite some time ago, I always took a chance and participated in some od those funny "blind tests" e.g. by Archimago and I was able to tell the difference both between MP3 and PCM, and as well between MQA and PCM. I am no golden ear, and no idea if 10 years later I would still get the same results. But I suspect that hundreds of hours of listening to different versions of same works, looking for differences between Abbado and Rattle take on the same stuff trains you to recognize nuances in sound.You’ve said nothing about the bias controls in place before the listening that led to these grand pronouncements, so nobody is inclined to think they mean anything.
I like actually Musikverein [Wiener Philharmoniker home scene] better than Berlin, acoustics is different, but equally impressive.Well call me jealous on that. Love that hall! One of my most memorable concerts ever was seeing Vladimir Ashkenazy lead the DSO through Shostakovich 5 from the front row of the upper deck of the Philharmonie facing the conductor. Orchestra Hall here in Chicago doesn’t have that kind of seating. But it’s a fantastic ensemble and a great place to enjoy music.
Indeed - but why go for third best, if you can have second best? And I agree - if I do not enjoy something in DD+, there is zero chance I will enjoy in TrueHD. But if I do enjoy lossy bitstream, I will enjoy lossless a tiny bit more ;-).But that goes back to the larger point: knowing the enormous chasm between the real thing and canned just makes bleating about alleged differences between two different cans all the more asinine, no?
I think you changed the goal post here. I did not say that DR4 records would necessarily sound "sonically excellent". I was commenting on the statement that low DR would not only sound bad, it would sound worse on a good system, which is not true.
I dug up a fun band from Nevada for you. I suspect they won't vote for the same presidental candidate that I would have done if I lived in the USA (which I don't), but luckily that's not what this discussion is about. Five Finger Death Punch: War is The Answer. The 2018 reissue that I took a screenshot of below is available for instance on Spotify.
The first track is pretty heavy, so perhaps check out the relatively soft tracks "Bad Company" (DR5) and "Far from home" (DR6) before venturing to other tracks. This album sounds just fine, and it without a doubt sounds better on a better system.
Interestingly there's loads of expensive systems that makes stuff like this sound pretty bad. Common features about those systems are:
- Lack of low end
- Lack of energy in the mid bass
- Uneven response in the 1-4khz area
- Elevated highs.
So I hope you appreciate all my efforts for the cause of audio science, In the spirit of DR4 challenge I have chosen Track3 and listened on following gears:
- old Apple headphones
- BT Sony 1000MX5 [my plane BT headphones]
- HarmanKardon car audio in my wife's car
- Burmester 4D car audio in my car
- Neumann KH310 with DSP to remove room modes
- Martin Logan Renaissance 15A crossed over at 80Hz to 4x4 Trinnov Waveforming subs, room acoustically treated to have +-10% decay time 100-10.000Hz, speaker linearity +-2dB and B&K Curve. Profesionally calibrated. Probably not perfect, but also nothing that can be described as "broken" [EDIT: It got actually bit better, when I tried upmix to Auromatic, but I think we can agree, that this was not intended use case, to run it via 24 channels]
While the music was not really offensively bad [although I do not really get the purpose of this pop-metal [like the chubby white adolescents, that try to pretend they are tough gangstas]. sonically it was a formless compressed porridge in my reference system. on KH310 nearfield it was like a sonic waterboarding.
Car Audio and headphones - I could survive, without lasting brain damage.
You owe me for going through this, my friend.
First of all, creds for testing! But you didn't read the instructions, I specifically said you should try Bad Company or Far From Home, you ended up picking one of the "worst" tracks on the album. Also doesn't seem like you appreciate this genre, which probably doesn't help.
But I am still surprised if you think it sounded better on Apple or Car Audio than on your main system. Not a great review of the KH310 either.
The track you are referring to ("Bulletproof") is pretty intense and monotonous, but on my system it is not harsh, forward or difficult to listen to in any way. And while I agree it's somewhat of a wall of sound, it's not porridge. It's still possible to pick out the individual instruments - drums, hihats/cymbals, guitar and voice are clearly separated. It's nowhere near as bad as older black metal as an example, that's like ten times worse (and admittedly not a high bar to pass).e
EDIT: Either way the point was a bit lost I think, since you're likely finding this to be porridge due to the production choices and type of music. How about testing Bad Company, which is DR5 so almost as bad with regards to dynamic range. Not on all systems, just on your main system perhaps.
I might have a strange way of doing things, as I am classically trained composer who does not think in regular metres – my way shows how the rhythm keeps augmenting itself ... so the breakdown (from 2 mins in) works for me as – 2/4 x 4, (move) 6/8, 7/8, 4/4, 5/8, 5/4 (follow the hi-hat tic or you will not get it), 3/4, (Poppy starts screaming) 6/8, 7/8, 4/4, 5/8, 7/16, 4/4. Then crotchet = dotted crotched metrical modulation 6/4, 7/4, 4/2, 5/4, 5/4, 6/4, 7/4. The crotchet beat ends up the same as the beginning of the song. I have seen the beginning of Eat written in 3/4, but it doesn't really express the complexity of what is happening either (try 7/4 + 5/4 – much more fun + there is a clear five downbeats before she starts singing). TBH, there aren't many bands around where you could even need to think about expressing things as above. It would just be >yawn< syncopation or something.
First of all, creds for testing! But you didn't read the instructions, I specifically said you should try Bad Company or Far From Home, you ended up picking one of the "worst" tracks on the album. Also doesn't seem like you appreciate this genre, which probably doesn't help.
But I am still surprised if you think it sounded better on Apple or Car Audio than on your main system[. Not a great review of the KH310 either.
The track you are referring to ("Bulletproof") is pretty intense and monotonous, but on my system it is not harsh, forward or difficult to listen to in any way. And while I agree it's somewhat of a wall of sound, it's not porridge. It's still possible to pick out the individual instruments - drums, hihats/cymbals, guitar and voice are clearly separated. It's nowhere near as bad as older black metal as an example, that's like ten times worse (and admittedly not a high bar to pass).e
EDIT: Either way the point was a bit lost I think, since you're likely finding this to be porridge due to the production choices and type of music. How about testing Bad Company, which is DR5 so almost as bad with regards to dynamic range. Not on all systems, just on your main system perhaps.