vb1
Head-Fier
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2002
- Posts
- 83
- Likes
- 10
Gee Mike, you certainly are being treated rather shabbily here. I’ve got to hand it too you, you take it like a gentleman.
My hats off to you.
Cheers.
My hats off to you.
Cheers.
Originally posted by Mike Walker When the emperor is "butt-naked" guys, somebody needs to say so. |
Stereo Review, and more importantly (as a serious scientific journal, the best of them all) Audio are gone. They would have said "this is just silly". Now they can't. But I can! Deal with it. |
Originally posted by Commander What is accurate? To me it simply means that what I record is what I hear on TV/Radio/Cinema when it is transmitted. The signal path in my studio is as pure as possible, and I never use bass boost or any eq with either the Koss KSC-35 or the Sennheiser HD280. The Sennheiser HD25's sound lovely in comparison, much closer to the Koss! BTW I am not a Bass Head (!) but I do like to hear the whole picture! I have some old AKG K280's that run rings around the Sennheiser HD280's, but they are an open design and create spill when used in a recording environment. |
Originally posted by Mike Walker So what will my punishment be? |
Originally posted by Mike Walker I went on to say that soundstage is PERCEIVED, not real. It's actually created by our ears/brains! This doesn't mean that it SEEMS any less real. As I pointed out, it can be manipulated in ways that are well known to engineers. But the real work is taking place between our ears, not our speakers! |
I agree that "other observable phenomenon....exist". But, as I pointed out, just because these phenomena are observable, doesn't make them real! |
There is no "magic" going on with your system! The true magic happens in the studio, and (most importantly) BETWEEN YOUR EARS! The brain can be fooled into seeing and hearing "images" which aren't really there. Thank God! Otherwise audio and video systems would be of very little value! |