Best Of
Just in another place with this hobby.
Hello everyone,
recently had a egg nog bourbon moment in Phil's thread on his new amp he just got. I was reading the back and forth , the questions about if he should be feeling the way he does about his new amp, on and on the thread went and I got a bit "OUT" on the conversation. I shouldn't have posted my Blah Blah comment as it was unfair to Phil and everyone talking about the amp. So my apologies on that.
Anyway , I have not been totally into this hobby as I have been over the decades I have enjoy it. I feel I lost my way in business , making a living and working on other things other than pure enjoyment of this hobby. As most of you know I'm also a Professional not just a hobbyist. So when your around audio video every single day decade after decade and own your own business, you tend to waiver from your hobby side and focus more on your business side. Still no accuse for my comments on Phils thread.
I still love this hobby but I'm absolutely in a different place than probably all of you. I look at things a bit different and from a different perspective. I'm no longer chasing the absolute purity of sound, I'm not after the next greatest thing and chasing it. I'm not after keep climbing the ladder of higher end stuff etc.
I few reasons for that is I have other hobby's I enjoy more like Drag Racing and detailing. That I have never fell off but I also don't do it for a living. Even if I did, my passion there is still as strong as it was since I was a young kid.
Funny about that is I also have had mad passion for audio then video since I was very young. My family was all musicians , mostly purchased higher end equipment, had awesome record collections etc. Hell I grew up on Brarbra Streisand , the Beatles and Queen. Kiss came into my life at a very young age and I had a Record player since like 5. I had 45's that had the Drummer Boy on one of them and I think I played the living hell out of the record. I had Kiss , Disco stuff, Grease, Saturday night fever , many Queen records as well as a lot of Kiss stuff. I never could get enough and since that very young age, I had the best audio equipment my money could buy.
Over the last decade or more , as being in the industry , I have met a lot of Audio engineers , amp designers , software dudes, all kinds of walks of life in this industry and a few of those conversations got me off my audio love path. Some of the things I learned sucked. I'll be totally honest I hated some of the things I learned as it went against a lot of what drove me to where I was going then.
That's another conversation but the reality of it all is yeah I still love this stuff. I still enjoy a great system. I enjoy designing them and then seeing my work come into reality.
Right now I have a new pair of Office speakers I'm enjoying. I have been as I always do TEST them with different equipment to see what I like and don't. It's fun I added a Subwoofer to them to see if that would bring another level of enjoyment to my life, it did and it also sparked a totally full new system going into my Family Room which is where I do my Movie and a lot of music listening. That room is finally gonna get some acoustic treatments and I'm gonna make the room much better for audio as in its current state SUCKS for sound. Over the decades I would keep buying new amps, new AVR's new speakers , new cables and all the jazz and honestly none of my system ever turned out exactly how I wanted them and I always knew it was the room and I was spending money on things and not getting my return on them. I was supposed to build a Dedicated Theater room in my basement decades ago, never got around to doing it. Always found other things to spend my money on , ok also my wife had some play in that but either way without a good room, my audio journey also got tarnished due to never really having a great place to enjoy what I can design.
Happy New year everyone.
recently had a egg nog bourbon moment in Phil's thread on his new amp he just got. I was reading the back and forth , the questions about if he should be feeling the way he does about his new amp, on and on the thread went and I got a bit "OUT" on the conversation. I shouldn't have posted my Blah Blah comment as it was unfair to Phil and everyone talking about the amp. So my apologies on that.
Anyway , I have not been totally into this hobby as I have been over the decades I have enjoy it. I feel I lost my way in business , making a living and working on other things other than pure enjoyment of this hobby. As most of you know I'm also a Professional not just a hobbyist. So when your around audio video every single day decade after decade and own your own business, you tend to waiver from your hobby side and focus more on your business side. Still no accuse for my comments on Phils thread.
I still love this hobby but I'm absolutely in a different place than probably all of you. I look at things a bit different and from a different perspective. I'm no longer chasing the absolute purity of sound, I'm not after the next greatest thing and chasing it. I'm not after keep climbing the ladder of higher end stuff etc.
I few reasons for that is I have other hobby's I enjoy more like Drag Racing and detailing. That I have never fell off but I also don't do it for a living. Even if I did, my passion there is still as strong as it was since I was a young kid.
Funny about that is I also have had mad passion for audio then video since I was very young. My family was all musicians , mostly purchased higher end equipment, had awesome record collections etc. Hell I grew up on Brarbra Streisand , the Beatles and Queen. Kiss came into my life at a very young age and I had a Record player since like 5. I had 45's that had the Drummer Boy on one of them and I think I played the living hell out of the record. I had Kiss , Disco stuff, Grease, Saturday night fever , many Queen records as well as a lot of Kiss stuff. I never could get enough and since that very young age, I had the best audio equipment my money could buy.
Over the last decade or more , as being in the industry , I have met a lot of Audio engineers , amp designers , software dudes, all kinds of walks of life in this industry and a few of those conversations got me off my audio love path. Some of the things I learned sucked. I'll be totally honest I hated some of the things I learned as it went against a lot of what drove me to where I was going then.
That's another conversation but the reality of it all is yeah I still love this stuff. I still enjoy a great system. I enjoy designing them and then seeing my work come into reality.
Right now I have a new pair of Office speakers I'm enjoying. I have been as I always do TEST them with different equipment to see what I like and don't. It's fun I added a Subwoofer to them to see if that would bring another level of enjoyment to my life, it did and it also sparked a totally full new system going into my Family Room which is where I do my Movie and a lot of music listening. That room is finally gonna get some acoustic treatments and I'm gonna make the room much better for audio as in its current state SUCKS for sound. Over the decades I would keep buying new amps, new AVR's new speakers , new cables and all the jazz and honestly none of my system ever turned out exactly how I wanted them and I always knew it was the room and I was spending money on things and not getting my return on them. I was supposed to build a Dedicated Theater room in my basement decades ago, never got around to doing it. Always found other things to spend my money on , ok also my wife had some play in that but either way without a good room, my audio journey also got tarnished due to never really having a great place to enjoy what I can design.
Happy New year everyone.
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Re: What did you do to your stereo rig today?
displayname wrote: »displayname wrote: »Got to sneak in a couple more upgrades before the end of the year. Very excited and grateful that this dream was able to become a reality.
Rosso Fiorentino Volterra and Norma IPA-140.
I have the Norma, so maybe one of these days I’ll snag a pair of Volterra’s. They’re my end game speaker.
Congrats!!!
Yep, the Volterra's are superb ear candy. Willy is getting it done! Congrats.
I want them so bad.. I actually talked to Skip sometime ago about them, just can't let myself do it..displayname wrote: »Got to sneak in a couple more upgrades before the end of the year. Very excited and grateful that this dream was able to become a reality.
Rosso Fiorentino Volterra and Norma IPA-140.
I have the Norma, so maybe one of these days I’ll snag a pair of Volterra’s. They’re my end game speaker.
Congrats!!!
Yep, the Volterra's are superb ear candy. Willy is getting it done! Congrats.
I want them so bad.. I actually talked to Skip sometime ago about them, just can't let myself do it..
I'd have to sell both Kidneys, a lung and a liver to be able to afford them, but yea, WHY not you only live once....
I’ve felt the same way for a long time. It’s pretty surreal still. I got an excellent deal on this gear locally from a guy looking to downsize. It feels a bit like winning the lottery to an extent. I was really planning to use these funds on a new turntable, but this deal was worth getting spouse approval to stretch the budget a little!
So, have you left the sweet spot since you got them???😁😁😁
Not much! Back to the office tomorrow so hopefully I can get in there a little more today
displayname
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Re: Just in another place with this hobby.
Reminds me of guys I know who do a lot of heavy analytical work on computers all day. They don't want to spend their time looking at a computer screen when they're not working.
Yep. That’s me. Got a degree in Computer Science, 25 years later I don’t want anything to do with them. They lost their swizzle after 9-10 hours a day.
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Re: Post a picture.....any picture...part deux...
skipshot12 wrote: »When cars actually had style.
And we only had 2 genders
Willow
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Re: F1 Lego build with the kiddo.
Thank you for sharing.
Way cool you get to hang with your daughter on something you both enjoy.
Way cool you get to hang with your daughter on something you both enjoy.
skipshot12
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Re: Review: Benchmark AHB2 Amp
Polk has been recommending separate amplification since introducing the ring radiator tweeter on its LSi lineup more than a couple decades ago. It's mainly the tweeter that presents a difficult load. When that line was introduced there were a handful of home theater receivers rated as being 4 ohm stable. Now, most mid-grade and up receivers are capable of running Polk's speakers that have that type of tweeter. The whole Reserve line is rated as being compatible with amplifiers that are 8/6/or 4 ohm stable. But merely being compatible doesn't mean a relatively small power supply in a receiver shared across 7 or more speakers wouldn't benefit from some supporting power. The tweeters in the LSiM707s get hot even with high current amplification when driven hard.
A receiver won't get the best performance out of the speakers and in the hands of people who don't know any better and drive a system at too high a volume for too long warranty repairs eventually become necessary because of blown tweeters. This is also why all but the cheapest receivers have pre-amplifier outputs. If knowledgeable customers wouldn't benefit from having them they wouldn't be there, right?
I usually recommend that someone who's interested in home theater as a hobby at least get a separate amplifier like an Outlaw Audio Model 5000x or 7000x. I have both and both are way better than any receiver at powering 4 ohm load speakers in a multichannel home theater system. But they are not intended to be the highest quality two channel amps. I switch over to Parasound or something else for that. Marantz does also make separate and integrated amps!
Crutchfield recommends high current separate or integrated amps for all of the Reserve speakers, not just the big R700s which dip down to 3.6 ohms minimum. This is from their R200 listing.
"Recommended amplifier power: 30-200 watts
high-current amplification from a quality power amp or integrated amp is recommended for best performance"
I'm glad you have some experience . You base your decesions to discount the ability of a AVR to power a theater system by spec, not by experience. My question to you is out of the 7 Theaters you spec'd and built or helped your friends do, how many had AVR's that just couldn't get the job done?
Yes I'm in the Industry , Yes I have built spec'd and installed Hundreds of Surround systems and Theater ranging from nice small family Room Bose systems to Million Dollar Wilson / Krell / Proceed etc stuff over my decades in this business. I'm not looking to measure that.
I completely disagree with you that you can't power a Theater system with a AVR because you're using internal amps. That is simply not true UNLESS you spec a AVR that does NOT have the ability to power a speaker package in a larger room that the AVR simply can't do. That my friend , we can agree. I have seen clients from companies that I have worked for in the past decide to purchase against the salesman recommended AVR and go with a less powerful unit and yes it was underwhelming and struggled to power their speaker package in their room at reference volumes.
Now under reference volumes , most AVR's will get the job done and satisfy most people. I've seen it hundreds of times. However I have also used AVR's in countless theater rooms and family lifestyle rooms where you couldn't run the AVR out of gas no matter how loud you play it.
So you again are looking at spec's and saying shared power and all that stuff matter , I can tell you, hardly never ever have I seen this happen in the real world. Powering a full Dynaudio Theater system or B&W or Monitor Audio or Klipsch or name a brand that has a line of theater speaker setups and I can match them with the room dimensions with a AVR that will power them.
So to support your point on spec's and amp shared power in a AVR, there are demands that an AVR simply can't support and you absolutely need to add external power amps or go separates , not so much today but in the past, preamps where more popular as the noise floor in older AVR's where not on the same level of dedicated preamps, that was true then not today. But again a Theater of the size 25 x 45 with all Martin Logan speakers no AVR I know of can power such a system in a 9. 2 configuration. So in this very case we can agree. I used all Proceed amps to power all these Martin Logan speakers.
Another example where you are right was a Wilson Audio Theater system I did. We used all Krell Monoblocks as a AVR was simply not going to power this system in a 20 x 31 room.
Blanket statements like yours and throwing spec's around hold NO water unless you put it into a room and speaker package. If you build a Klipsch Theater system, hardly never do you need external power amps. Marantz , Denon or Integra AVR's when again spec's correctly for the space and speaker package will absolutely drive that system into Reference with plenty of head room for dynamic passages.
The older LSI speakers from polk, yes they were power hungry and needed more current than the RT line which required much less to achieve a good theater experience. No power amps where not always necessary, I had a B&K AVR that powered the LSi's to breaking point with the internal 125 watt amp which by the way was the same exact power amp as the stand alone 125.7 you can buy. How do I know that? I watched them build it at the B&K factory in NY when I went there for training. I watched them hand build amps preamps and AVR's and all the parts they used where exactly the same in different chassis. The LSI system also responded very well to when I purchased a Pioneer Elite ICE AVR which was fantastic back in the day SC-07. It had plenty of power to drive my entire LSI 15 , LSI C , LSI 7's and LSI FX speakers to Reference levels with no issues overheated or Shut downs.
When power is needed , it's used , when power isn't needed , it's not used. You would be surprised on how many people use 1/8 of the power they have on a day to day basis to drive their speakers to levels satisfying to them. It's not always about Reference levels as not many people inlcuding everyone in this forum do not listen at Reference levels, If they did , their hearing would be damaged and then the joy of listening would be compromised.
So having this interesting conversation with you I'm not interested in Gotcha or your dumb or anything like that. But you made claims as other did on this thread about AVR's not being good enough to do the jobs they where built for. That is simply not true. Maybe many on here feel that way and that is perfectly fine. Add all the amps you want.
Phil the thread starter has very nice speakers , he changes them a lot but guess what? Ask Phil how loud he listens to he's system, I had to ask him many times to turn it up as he does NOT like it overly loud or anywhere near reference levels, it becomes uncomfortable for him and I do NOT judge him for that. He likes what he likes, he has WAY more power then he will ever use, He has REL subwoofers all over the place and they never crack a sweat. I have been to Phil's house a few times and got the pleasure of actually enjoying his company , his system and NEED all that power he has? No, his Yamaha AVR has more power than he will ever need or use but he enjoys this hobby like the rest of us as he sees fit and if he wants Parasound or whatever amp he desires and puts in his system because he likes it, I'm completely fine with that. But I'm also not going to tell him he needs it when he does not.
Apparently you and I desire different levels of performance in a home theater, and that’s fine. You are correct in your assertion that an AVR is “good enough” for the majority of HT customers. That said, I will stand by my statement that I have never encountered a situation where external amplification did not make a substantial difference in sound quality. This is also to say nothing of the myriad drawbacks of the “everything in one box” compromise of an AVR.
We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming. Apologies @pearsall001 for the thread hijack…:-)
daddyjt
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