kemmler3D
Major Contributor
Aesthetic requirements should be considered as fixed... the output of a WAF evaluation is typically binary... but a little grille can go a long way in these situations.accept lowering the importance of aesthetics.
Aesthetic requirements should be considered as fixed... the output of a WAF evaluation is typically binary... but a little grille can go a long way in these situations.accept lowering the importance of aesthetics.
I think you've seen this reference before: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1260/1351-010X.18.3-4.349I've made up close recordings of individual musicians in a group. Played back with one speaker per musician and speakers placed where they were live it is very high quality they are here result. Yes, people say directionality of a speaker and instruments are very different etc etc. Yes true. But a single real audio source with no phantoms for each musician with speakers arranged similarly is enough to get you a big step toward sounding real. Sounding like they are right here in whatever room you set up this kind of playback.
Sure. Me too, though I would say, in the music I make, I like to establish the illusion and then play with it. But that is the point., it is mostly an illusion created in the post process. One of my favorite examples of this is the From the Basement videos by Radiohead. They did much of In Rainbows and King of Limbs “live“ in the studio. But the mix presents a different spatial arrangement than what we can see of the performers.I can’t speak for others. I listen to a broad range of music, and yes I do want to have the sensation that I am present at the performance. Yes I know that for some genres the recording can be a mix, the single version of Silver Machine by Hawlkind had Lemmy‘s vocals instead of the original ones, because his voice worked better.
Of course there is an illusion, and I tend to avoid recordings where the illusion is poor. I certainly can have the illusion of being there with jazz, classical, folk, rock, and other genres.
Another potential approach could be electroacoustic simulation or sound field reproduction: https://users.aalto.fi/~ktlokki/Publs/JASMAN_vol_146_iss_5_3562_1.pdf. This sort of approach has led to some interesting research when it comes to concert hall acoustics (https://users.aalto.fi/~ktlokki/Publs/JASMAN_vol_140_iss_1_551_1.pdf), since AB comparisons of concert halls would be several orders of magnitude in terms of difficulty otherwise.The obstacles to fit for purpose loudspeaker blind AB testing are insurmountable. You can cut corners and do a shuffler or an anechoic recording and have listeners compare that with headphones.
Yes, you retroactively tried to cover by posting this long after I pointed out the folly of your original post AND the thread title itself, spelling out clearly the audiophile concoction of "detail retrieval" IS a speaker issue, not a:
Your fellow Canadian gets it eh? Summarized your OP nicely here
It's ok Matt, some people will just never get that "Subjective" isn't what they think it means.
I've had success in substantially increasing the detail and clarity in DIY speakers vs any commercial speakers I've yet to hear,
pursuing the following set of objectives in no particular order...
*An acoustic design that minimizes center-to-center spacing between drivers that share a common frequency range.
Goal is to stay within 1/4 WL throughout all summation ranges.
*Strive towards point source.
*A flat frequency magnitude response on-axis (quasi-anechoic). (Any house-curve preference applied afterwards.)
*Polar responses that reflect smooth pattern control of the on-axis flat response,.
*Constant directivity pattern control.
*Maintain that pattern control as low in frequency as possible. Goal is down to Schroeder.
*Linear SPL throughout the spectrum, including headroom for peaks, at desired maximum average SPL.
*Match driver sections' linear SPL capabilities, all staying easily within Xmax
*Sufficient subwoofer and low-mid sections displacements to maintain that SPL linearity, preferring cone area (Sd) over excursion (Xmax)
*Minimize modulation distortion of higher SPL by increasing the number of 'ways' employed.
*Each driver section individually amped and DSP processed.
*Flat phase response to reduce phase rotation and eliminate group delay apart from the bottom end rolloff.
*Delays between driver sections that equal, and only equal, the Z-axis distances between acoustic centers.
*Minimize lobing potential between driver sections via steep complementary linear phase crossovers.
Ok, maybe just a lot of technobabble for most I imagine.
But my hopeful point is this....if a numbnuts amatuer DIY speaker builder like me, has learned things that really do improve detail & clarity,
.....many/some of which are missing from the vast majority of commercial offerings.....
how is it possible there are not many speaker improvements still lying on the table?
Maybe a rebuttal is: "you just think you are hearing improvements because you are so invested into DIY."..
Good point...I wonder it myself at times.
But two things give me solace. First, I still have some highly regarded commercial stuff to compare to, along with listening to other folks'/stores'/shows' systems.
And second, probably 90% of things I try go nowhere...I fail at improving a LOT. Keeps the egoic investment down....
Good headphones are the only thing I've heard with greater clarity and detail than latest DIY speaker build.
But they of course can't begin to provide the sound of powerful bass and bass transients, that speakers can. The visceral experience.
Oh, a few suggestions for evaluating clarity and detail.
If your speakers and amps are up to it, take one side of the stereo outdoors and listen without the room. Bass output might be weak, but it can still be quite ear opening how much clarity usually improves. Back to the almighty importance of a room, huh
Another room test...put on sealed back headphones and listen to tracks playing through the speaker(s), but with a measurement mic providing the signal to the phones.
Shows the drastic amount of brain/ear processing vs what a mic measures.
Last, if you can do the setup outdoors, make a recording of a song played through the speaker. Play that recording, and while evaluating the difference vs original, record the recording. Play the 2nd recording, repeating the process. See how many recordings survive listenability. Typically only one or two.
(credit for both tests to posts by TD of DSL)
No "blindfolds" are needed in 99.9% of "blind" testing. A scrim in front of both band and speakers simultaneously would suffice. But you've missed the point entirely.
It was possible to create something (JJs demo, which BTW, there is a new one that can be visited) that sounded very very real to 2 audiophiles (no lack of "details retrieval", in fact "details out the wazoo") who would (via Stereophile positions) have heard every magic material "$65k" "detail retrieving" type speakers on earth at the time, far more "real" than any of that nonsense, with rather pedestrian speakers. Using what would be (to audiophiles), vastly inferior cabinets, drivers, materials, etc, with highly likely more "distortions" than todays magic drivers, materials etc, etc.
How would one with such beliefs (99% of all audio forum posters?) reconcile this?
J_Js method was quite something. A shame it was not allowed to develop commercially. It also was pretty simple.
That's what you're claiming now, but fully ignoring all other controls, volume/level, room/modes, concocted audiophile lingo terms derived from "I heard it", etc.And acknowledge that I would have made my OP comments in the context of being fully aware of sighted listening liabilities
I used many references with exact same themeOr are you just incapable of incorporating information that goes against your first impressions? (The essence of biased thinking).
As Danny taught you, its that "flat earther" thing that makes me oblivious. Nice edit BtwDo you ever get tired of being wrong?
There were 2 "someones", one is till a current member hereHowever, the JJ anecdote about someone finding the sound to be "realistic" in character
LOLdoes not speak directly to the question in this thread regarding whether we are able to accurately, audibly transpose all the sonic information in a recording to sound via current speaker systems.
Sonic convincingness and apparent realism are separable from accuracy. In my business of sound design we manipulate - which includes distorting - sound all the time to sound "more real" than it would if it had been left unaltered. The JJ demo may have been sonically compelling, but that in itself doesn't tell us the speaker system was retrieving all possible information from the recording.
J-J's system was meant to somewhat recreate the soundfield around the listener's head. Soundfield reconstruction. It used microphones in a way it could pick up some important cues missed by conventional miking. And then upon playback with some simple math of combining the signals do a better job recreating the soundfield of the microphone rig around the LP. It used as I recall, 7 channels around and one up and one down microphone. Spacing was something on the order of 1 meter diameter I think.Agreed, JJ's stuff was/is fascinating (I followed him off and on since our days back on the Audio Usenet forums and it's great to see he still posts here).
However, the JJ anecdote about someone finding the sound to be "realistic" in character does not speak directly to the question in this thread regarding whether we are able to accurately, audibly transpose all the sonic information in a recording to sound via current speaker systems.
Sonic convincingness and apparent realism are separable from accuracy. In my business of sound design we manipulate - which includes distorting - sound all the time to sound "more real" than it would if it had been left unaltered. The JJ demo may have been sonically compelling, but that in itself doesn't tell us the speaker system was retrieving all possible information from the recording.
BTW did I see your system on display at burning amp last year? If so, it sounded great but I remember thinking maybe cinderblock classrooms aren't the most favorable place to demo high-end speakersLol
I'll send this latest DIY(white) , or its predecessor (blue) along with the DSP processor that runs their design, along with the needed amp rack.
Easy peasy to send along to Amir, huh?
View attachment 288376View attachment 288380View attachment 288377View attachment 288378
The processor and amp rack are set up for simultaneous speaker setups for A/B testing of other DIYs and commercials.
Of course doesn't need to be so complicated. Could all be put into some plate amps. So kinda ignore them, other than they are essential for my work.
BUT, pls don't ignore the large speaker....that's what I've found it takes to satisfy the acoustic design goals i listed
And I guess this is the real rub....since when will home audio embrace such large horn speakers?
Aesthetics appear to rank higher in home audio than sound. (not at all meaning to downplay realworld room constraints)
I guess in reality, the biggest single design factor i can think of for home audio to be able to increase detail and clarity, is to accept lowering the importance of aesthetics.
Like the new Genelec kinda did...big step forward for SQ I think...
That's what you're claiming now, but fully ignoring all other controls, volume/level, room/modes, concocted audiophile lingo terms derived from "I heard it", etc.
Nor any cognizance that you have zero clue what's "in the recording", to "retrieve", other than what you imagine from your transductions. In different rooms. With different speakers, With....Caught in the Circle of Confusion.
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I used many references with exact same theme
1+1=....
So my day job deals mostly with digital photography. It was surprising to me when I first came across this site, that audio management isn’t just taken for granted. That in the audio world this concept is still fairly new. Part of that is the inherently more complex situation with audio (light waves don’t interact in the same way (perception wise) as audio waves). But even then there are enough similarities with the audio world that I found it interesting.What do you think The Circle Of Confusion is about in the first place? Floyd Toole raises the Circle Of Confusion as a reason for adopting standards in music production!! (e.g. monitor/room calibration) as well as suggesting this could in principle be adopted in home systems. Why does he suggest this? Because it's one way to move towards maintaining accuracy in reproducing the recording from production to reproduction - including the reduction of speaker colorations that would distort the recorded signal. Right? Get it?
So my day job deals mostly with digital photography. It was surprising to me when I first came across this site, that audio management isn’t just taken for granted. That in the audio world this concept is still fairly new. Part of that is the inherently more complex situation with audio (light waves don’t interact in the same way (perception wise) as audio waves). But even then there are enough similarities with the audio world that I found it interesting.
In color management, every color creating device (camera, monitors, printer/paper combo) is calibrated and profiled so that the changes are controlled, understood, and accounted for. This isn’t done to make everything look the same, but for the artist to be able to control how they want the color to work. The reason it works in photo is the entire reproduction chain is controlled by the artist. For audio, the last step (the equivalent of the printer/paper) is in the hands of the consumer. And the speaker/room is far more impactful than print/room interactions in photography (not that they aren’t there in photo, just that they have been largely dealt with. No more metamerism!).
All of which is to say, in audio, perhaps, if transparency to the recording is the ideal, that the question maybe shouldn’t be better speakers or acoustics but simply to remove the issue entirely (big hand wave here) somehow? Is there a way to make playing a song the equivalent of buying a framed photograph and hanging it on your wall? I certainly can’t think of one off the top of my head, but it was a blank slate moment I had when you were addressing the points Tolle makes.
All of which is to say, in audio, perhaps, if transparency to the recording is the ideal, that the question maybe shouldn’t be better speakers or acoustics but simply to remove the issue entirely (big hand wave here) somehow? Is there a way to make playing a song the equivalent of buying a framed photograph and hanging it on your wall? I certainly can’t think of one off the top of my head, but it was a blank slate moment I had when you were addressing the points Tolle makes.
This is pretty spot-on, but the accuracy of a good modern TV relative to what's used in the editing studio is MUCH closer to what most home systems sound like compared to what's used in a mixing studio. An LG C2 TV will be pretty close to properly calibrated out of the box, these days.I don't know anyone who has calibrated the TV, but some will have fiddled with the image settings or presets to suit their taste.
What if the walls are yellow, or I'm using some atrocious LEDs?This is pretty spot-on, but the accuracy of a good modern TV relative to what's used in the editing studio is MUCH closer to what most home systems sound like compared to what's used in a mixing studio. An LG C2 TV will be pretty close to properly calibrated out of the box, these days.
Many people nowadays view photos and videos on their computer or smartphone screens. The visual 'artist' has no more control over the accuracy of that reproduction than an audio engineer.
I don't know anyone who has calibrated the TV, but some will have fiddled with the image settings or presets to suit their taste. Audiophiles do the same with their systems.
I like my Darjeeling with sugar and no milk. What about you?
If I had any legit use for these triaxials, they’d be a fun diy.A 3-way coaxial that can cross over with the woofers lower, that way vocals don't get split between bass/midrange multiple drivers. I always see really high crossover frequencies with the woofer(s). This will probably require more lower sensitivity and more power handling from the midrange.
Maybe the solution to this is a 4-way, where the coaxial driver itself is a 3-way that's all coincident, while the bass drivers are in a different location.