Anyway, here are some poorly taken photos of my just-received NT-6 Pro's
And they sound fantastic
Wow, those are beautiful.
Anyway, here are some poorly taken photos of my just-received NT-6 Pro's
And they sound fantastic
I also tried inverting the polarities of the cables and I seem to have answered my own question, sort of. I do not hear any difference between swapping the polarities of both sides of the cables. It seems as long as both are in phase, there should be no audible differenceI tried some polarity test tracks and the NT-6 still sounded correct as long as both are in phase. I am really clueless when it comes to the scientific/technical area of audio
But wouldn't that mean that the you'll be listening to them with the polarities inverted? Would that be audible or negative in any way?
Sorry for spamming questions but I'm just curious that's all.
Wow, those are beautiful.
That was my conclusion as well. If we get picky and know a song inside out, we may find that the instruments are on the opposite sides as normal, but typically this doesn't matter to me and can be corrected quickly if it did. Out of phase and there are weird problems. Unfortunately, neither the cable makers nor the CIEM manufacturers are doing us any favors with clear markings to show us the intended phase alignment so it is all a guess at best.
Dunno. Guess it depends on the listener, preference and listening experience.
From what I tried with my NT-6 the soundstage and subbass (likely from phase shift) will slightly increase, but the stereo seperation and image is just plain wrong and unnatural as possible.
Details which should occur in the center of the track are placed at the edge of soundstage. I don't like it at all.
Other IEM's may suffer even more from phase shift, as they aren't as neutral as the NT-6.
wow that was frequency response for nt6 pro. they surely changed the tuning. looks smoother to me.
you think so? from memory of the old charts somewhere in this thread, it seems like the bass hump got bigger.