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Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Eeyore" wrote in
message Arny Krueger wrote: There is no chance that there is anything wrong with the sound of the CD format since it is sonically transparent. No help to those who actively seek colouration though. Same as valve amps. The two ( liking valves and LPs) seem to go hand-in-hand which strongly suggests to me that those people like a strongly coloured sound. I think that sentimentality, a desire to be different for the sake of being different, and gettting attention is behind most of the adamant LP preference we see expressed around here. |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
. .. "Eeyore" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: There is no chance that there is anything wrong with the sound of the CD format since it is sonically transparent. No help to those who actively seek colouration though. Same as valve amps. The two ( liking valves and LPs) seem to go hand-in-hand which strongly suggests to me that those people like a strongly coloured sound. I think that sentimentality, a desire to be different for the sake of being different, and gettting attention is behind most of the adamant LP preference we see expressed around here. Add to that a liking for horn loudspeakers, and we have the triumvirate - vinyl-valves-horns. Coloration rules OK? S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Eeyore" wrote in message ... Keith G wrote: "Bob Latham" wrote If you guys say so. I would say enormous numbers of people prefer LPs to Cds. Sure - the majority of people I know (who care about music) do.... Are they all very old people like you ? First time I've been called 'very old'! :-) Anyway, no - one of them is my son! Maybe their hearing loss is masking some of the more obvious defects ? In the case of my son, his kit (Technics/B&W) masks any differences between CD and LP but he prefers *playing* the LPs and is a collector of various types of vinyl specialities (picture discs, promos &c.)... |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Eeyore" wrote in message ... Keith G wrote: but let's not forget the far superior 'information carrying' capacity of CDs - the average LP lasts approximately 7 minutes per side; Uh ? More like 20 mins IIRC. the average music CD lasts 3 days.... Anything that plays for 3 days ISN'T an audio *CD* ! An audio CD is limited to ~ 50 mins. To paraphrase Judge Judy: Your looks, voice and mental ability will fade eventually, but *dumb* is for life... |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Eeyore" wrote in message Keith G wrote: but let's not forget the far superior 'information carrying' capacity of CDs - the average LP lasts approximately 7 minutes per side; Uh ? More like 20 mins IIRC. Agreed. Except that LPs are generally so bad that it is questionable whether you can call the corrupted mess that can be recovered from them *music*. Catch a grip, Arny.... |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Eiron" wrote in message ... Eeyore wrote: I HAVE heard bad CD players such as the original Sony CDP-101. It souded 'harsh' to me (one can speculate over what casued that) and I was convinced that reverberation was being truncated (although that could have been the result of flawed mastering). Me too. I never discovered whether it was my neighbour's CDP-101, the 'Realistic' amp and speakers or the 1980's music but something gave me a headache. Hmm, spoilt for choice there... Perhaps he's still got it in the junk box; it would be interesting to find out how bad it was. Then you could stick pins in your eyes to round the evening off.... |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Eeyore" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: There is no chance that there is anything wrong with the sound of the CD format since it is sonically transparent. No help to those who actively seek colouration though. Same as valve amps. The two ( liking valves and LPs) seem to go hand-in-hand which strongly suggests to me that those people like a strongly coloured sound. I think that sentimentality, a desire to be different for the sake of being different, and gettting attention is behind most of the adamant LP preference we see expressed around here. Catch a grip, Arny.... |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Eeyore" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: There is no chance that there is anything wrong with the sound of the CD format since it is sonically transparent. No help to those who actively seek colouration though. Same as valve amps. The two ( liking valves and LPs) seem to go hand-in-hand which strongly suggests to me that those people like a strongly coloured sound. I think that sentimentality, a desire to be different for the sake of being different, and gettting attention is behind most of the adamant LP preference we see expressed around here. Add to that a liking for horn loudspeakers, and we have the triumvirate - vinyl-valves-horns. Coloration rules OK? Make that the 'Holy Trinity' and *natural sound* rules OK and we, for once, could well be in accord, Serge! ;-) |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
Keith G wrote:
"Eiron" wrote in message ... Eeyore wrote: I HAVE heard bad CD players such as the original Sony CDP-101. It souded 'harsh' to me (one can speculate over what casued that) and I was convinced that reverberation was being truncated (although that could have been the result of flawed mastering). Me too. I never discovered whether it was my neighbour's CDP-101, the 'Realistic' amp and speakers or the 1980's music but something gave me a headache. Hmm, spoilt for choice there... Perhaps he's still got it in the junk box; it would be interesting to find out how bad it was. Then you could stick pins in your eyes to round the evening off.... Pins in the eyes or listening to Howard Jones and a-ha. A difficult choice. -- Eiron. |
Improving loudspeaker crossovers (SBL's)
Serge Auckland wrote:
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "Eeyore" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: There is no chance that there is anything wrong with the sound of the CD format since it is sonically transparent. No help to those who actively seek colouration though. Same as valve amps. The two ( liking valves and LPs) seem to go hand-in-hand which strongly suggests to me that those people like a strongly coloured sound. I think that sentimentality, a desire to be different for the sake of being different, and gettting attention is behind most of the adamant LP preference we see expressed around here. Add to that a liking for horn loudspeakers, and we have the triumvirate - vinyl-valves-horns. Coloration rules OK? They're not real horns. -- Eiron. |
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