Originally Posted by
SP Wild 
Agreed. Speakers are different. Your explanation is a plausible theory of why speakers stage significantly better than headphones and is not for me to dismiss. What is this backround noise you speak of and where is the likely source? I'd imaging the lower the volume of a sound the more difficult it would be to locate, no?
Where did it say that I determined the "strength of crossfeed". This is not possible with the absence of testing. I didn't even mention crossfeed.
You gave your hypothesis of possible contributors of headphone staging - I am in no position to dismiss your hypothesis. I merely added one other possible contributing factor with an explanation of how this variable might contribute to the subject. My hypothesis satisfies my curiosity, and is valid until proven otherwise. I like my hypothesis, I like this one very much...
Background noise as in ambient noise. A computer or a fridge.
Let's set up a thought experiment. You have one speaker, and one headphone cup, in a room with dead silent background noise. You place the speaker to your right and in front of you. We'll ignore delay for now. You play music from it at 80dB measured at the right ear. Let's just assume that the left ear hears the same signal at 70dB, though that might be a bit quiet. Now you place that headphone cup on your right ear, and play it at 80dB. How loud do you expect the left ear to hear it? Let's say 50dB, but I think that's optimistic. So we can presume that the effect is much weaker on the headphone, and imaging is weaker as well.
Now increase the background noise, ambient volume, whatever to 50dB. The speakers still have a crossfeed effect 20dB louder than it. The headphones have a crossfeed effect equal to background noise. It's not just weaker, it's potentially gone. Turn the volume down 10dB, and the speakers still have 10dB of crossfeed but the headphones don't have anything. If imaging relied on this, low listening volume with high ambient volume would have little or no imaging, and it would increase dramatically if the difference increased.
What you're implying is pseudo-crossfeed. One ear hears a delayed and quieter version of the other channel. That's crossfeed. This is what creates imaging. You implied that headphones will low isolation image better. I presumed that was because the crossfeed effect would be stronger. What did you mean otherwise?
Your hypothesis is just a hypothesis, just like mine. It has to stand up to testing, reason, and logic. You have to be able to defend it.
Edited by Head Injury - 10/25/11 at 1:28pm