It looks like a Vitavox version of a Living Voice. Very nice!it looks like Vitavox has recently introduced a super speaker we can purchase new today.
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CH on Lyra just doesn't work to my ears. I find it lifeless and uninvolving.
That is not the fault of the Lyra, which is a supremely musical speaker.
It looks like a Vitavox version of a Living Voice. Very nice!
(But I bet there's a reason David doesn't like it. Which means Peter and Tim won't like it either.)
That’s the whole point man. 10 vs 9 is nothing. ALL of the sound difference is due to the cabinet. Listen to the two speakers I mentioned and THEN comment. Yes different topologies create different requirements. This was not a cone vs horn discussion. I fully get why you like what like. BTW my experience with CH on gear I know is quite negative. I wouldn’t judge anything with them but that’s just my subjective opinion.
CH and Stenheim is so much superior.
It looks like a Vitavox version of a Living Voice. Very nice!
(But I bet there's a reason David doesn't like it. Which means Peter and Tim won't like it either.)
Not quite. At least I do not find the words "realism" and "reality" synonymous. If you want the reality of live acoustic music,go to a concert.
If you want realism from a stereo system, use the concert experience as your comparator reference.
Reproduction is not reality.
And there may be certain 'audiophile virtues' that come with stereo reproduction that you may not experience in the concert hall.
No. The friend whom I was helping on extensive in-home auditions isn't a big Stevie Nicks fan. So I forgot to play Stevie Nicks songs. Plus none of her recordings are particularly good in terms of recording quality, so I don't find her recordings terribly helpful for serious A/B comparisons.Did you make this judgment by listening to Stevie Nicks?
Made of wood... sounds pretty damn good to me!
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As my 15 year old daughter would say: “cool story bro.”I heard a speaker manufacturer was arrested recently for making heavy speakers/ ripping of audiophiles .
He was sentenced to 1 week confinement and kept awake all night with wall mounted Altec horns.
He got so terrorized by the sound that he signed a paper he would never make a heavy / dead inert speaker again and he was let off
Are cabinet colorations from speakers featuring cabinets other than wood so obvious that you can hear them over a low-resolution YouTube video?
Are cabinet colorations from speakers featuring cabinets other than wood so obvious that you can hear them over a low-resolution YouTube video?
What’s your preferred material cost no object and what’s your favorite material that’s more cost conscious?Ive made Ls out of all kinds of materials .
Hard composites have a decay on for example a piano tone that can never be matched by wood ( ok , may be a very hard wood like bullet wood ).
Ill be demonstrating with this set up at the Brussels show .
Lets see how the visitors respond .
Which you did with digital, for someone who has never auditioned before with digital.Also by comparing directly in the same system CH versus WestminsterLab on Clarisys Auditoriums.
Modern materials for enclosures and driver diaphragms produce less distortion, which is easy to measure. But I don't think they sound more musical lifelike. Imagine if musical instruments were built in the same way – then probably no one would listen to music anymore. So why choose materials that not allow for emotion and little timbre? There are companies that use the resonance of speaker enclosures to create a specific sound.
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