- Thread Starter
- #281
This was the most stupid argument for using Yamaha ns10 I have ever heard. This statements are responsible for the ” circle of confusion ”.
This was the most stupid argument for using Yamaha ns10 I have ever heard. This statements are responsible for the ” circle of confusion ”.
This was the most stupid argument for using Yamaha ns10 I have ever heard. This statements are responsible for the ” circle of confusion ”.
But better studiomonitors would surely make it betterYou may say that. But, just by having ns10's along many, many other tools and clearly some knowledge at hand does not imply this man should keep them hidden in the closet. In his other videos he demonstrates how manipulating numerous plugins affects the sound of the mix and some of other relevant topics he approaches with a sense of humor.
To me at least it is valuable to hear how much harmonic distortion, clipping, brick wall limiting is already upstream in the signal before it even reaches our beloved systems. Circle of confusion is there, no doubt about it. But David Mellor at least points out that better cables cannot fix it.
But better studiomonitors would surely make it better![]()
This brings out a feeling in me that says - mastering engineers are maybe not needed at all ? They destroy the music with loads of compression and they obviously dont care about soundquality, using very inferior loudspeakers when mastering. Have none of them read Dr. Tooles/Olives research ? They should, just for the case of education.Yes they possibly would if the final "polishing" done by mastering engineer wouldn't be affected by the label to sound like "that".![]()
This brings out a feeling in me that says - mastering engineers are maybe not needed at all ? They destroy the music with loads of compression and they obviously dont care about soundquality, using very inferior loudspeakers when mastering. Have none of them read Dr. Tooles/Olives research ? They should, just for the case of education.
As you may know I have played around with all-pass (including flipping) and it is audible for some asymmetric signals, for some people at least. But at higher frequencies, I have not seen any proof yet, e.g. when the phase shift occurs above 1 kHz due to a traditional x-over.You need to do a couple of years with experimenting with digital crossovers ( as I have done ) to see If your statement is true . It isnt, not in all cases.![]()
This is the frequency response from ns10:You may say that. But, just by having ns10's along many, many other tools and clearly some knowledge at hand does not imply this man should keep them hidden in the closet. In his other videos he demonstrates how manipulating numerous plugins affects the sound of the mix and some of other relevant topics he approaches with a sense of humor.
To me at least it is valuable to hear how much harmonic distortion, clipping, brick wall limiting is already upstream in the signal before it even reaches our beloved systems. Circle of confusion is there, no doubt about it. But David Mellor at least points out that better cables cannot fix it.
Yes, ns1000m was a much better speaker than ns10, and still is.Interestingly, you are discussing about Yamaha NS10 (NS-10M PRO), a "near-field" monitor.
Just for your interest and reference, in 1976 Swedish national broadcaster Sveriges Television chose Yamaha "NS-1000M" as its official monitor speaker, as it commanded respect as a professional monitor. Over 23 years up to 1997, over 200,000 units of this longtime bestseller were sold. I use NS-1000, not NS-1000M, though in my multichannel project.
As for the "transient behavior" (major topic of this thread) of 30 cm Yamaha woofer JA-3058 in sealed NS-1000 cabinet, I added two paragraphs at the bottom of my post #240 above on this thread.
This brings out a feeling in me that says - mastering engineers are maybe not needed at all ? They destroy the music with loads of compression and they obviously dont care about soundquality, using very inferior loudspeakers when mastering.
Gunning-KrugerThis was the most stupid argument for using Yamaha ns10 I have ever heard. This statements are responsible for the ” circle of confusion ”.
It could be clearer all round, but I'm comparing to a rare case of a better later remastering, I think...Listen to this @240p! Does it sound bad? Transients?
The phase should naturally rise as the bass rolls off. You shouldn't have flat phase if you don't have flat frequency response. Is that correct?Right, that phase starts rising at low frequencies, too. If we tried to push the flatness real low, the problem began.