The speaker?
June 30, 2009
Is Paradigm's
Studio 10 v.5 still the speaker to get?
Tim Runnels
For under $1000, yes. However, wait until
July 1 for a new review that's on a speaker that costs over $1000, but some people may
like more.
Blind testing again
June 23, 2009
Doug,
I read your editorial, and there's a lot to discuss here. Overall, I agree with
blind testing, but there are some finer points that must be considered.
Firstly, a machine that moves each set of
speakers into the same position makes the assumption that all speakers are designed to
work with the same proximity to boundaries. When you're testing variants on a design
you're developing, that's valid. When you're testing vastly different designs it may not
be. I know that you like to pull a speaker way out into the room to know what it
"sounds like," but some people do need to put speakers close to boundaries, and
a good design can take that into account. (A bad designer can just claim to have taken
that into account.) Such a system is, as you mention, quite expensive. A symmetric room
could allow for, at least, A-B tests.
There are two fundamental testing paradigms.
In one you change only one factor, and leave everything else the same. In the other, you
change many factors in a systematic way. The second approach takes more time and effort,
but yields much more information. Changing a single factor in our review systems and
making a judgment is little better than changing everything and making a judgment.
Boomboxes aside, there will always be equipment interactions.
S. Andrea Sundaram
SoundStage! Network writer
Research shows . . .
June 16, 2009
I just wanted to thank you for your May and June editorials promoting good scientific practices in the evaluation
and review of audio components. I appreciate you mentioning Harman as an example of an
audio company that uses sound scientific methods in the evaluation of their loudspeakers.
As you know, we use double-blind methods for evaluating the sound quality of our products
because our research has shown listeners' sound quality judgments are influenced by
sighted biases such as brand, price, etc. If you don't remove these sighted biases from
the test, you cannot measure the true sound quality of the product.
Research shows that consumers want
good-sounding products, but there aren't many reliable or meaningful sources of
information to point consumers in the right direction. As more audio review magazines like
yours adopt a more rigorous scientific approach in their evaluation of audio products, the
availability of accurate and reliable data can only raise consumer awareness and demand
for better quality audio products.
Keep up the good work!
Sincerely,
Sean Olive, Ph.D.
Director of Acoustic Research
Harman International
Bravo to blind listening
June 12, 2009
Dear Mr. Schneider,
I just read this
article, and all I can say is, "Bravo sir, bravo." The only thing I can add
is that Robert Harley is an elitist. (Im sure you knew this, but chose not to state
it in the article.)
Not only are they fearful of being embarrassed by a blind
test, but they are also fearful that they may actually like a $1000 amp or speakers. They
would then have no argument to justify the multiple tens of thousands (if not hundreds of
thousands) of dollars they have spent on their systems over the years.
As such, I have long since abandoned reading Stereophile
or The Abso!ute Sound. They are for rich @ssholes who believe in the total scam of
"pride of ownership." For the last seven or so years, ALL my audio reading comes
from the SoundStage! Network, and that goofy guy over there at 6moons.com
I much prefer your liberal take on audio. Bravo again to
you sir. Keep up the good, and honest, work.
Greg Morris
CD players and computers
June 7, 2009
I'm thinking of either buying a CD player
(probably my last one) or a laptop and a DAC. The way I see it, CD won't last long given
the way downloading is growing. But is it too soon to give up on the format altogether?
Timothy Wilson
You're wise in thinking about the options before you
purchase. In my opinion, CD players are in their last days and computer-based solutions
that play files from a hard drive or other storage device will continue to grow. People
who are buying a CD player right now are probably buying their last one, whereas those who
are jumping into computer-based audio are positioning themselves for the future. As a
result, there might be a reason that someone will still want a CD player, while there are
definitely other reasons that people will want to go for a computer-based solution. You'll
have to decide which side of the fence you wish to be on.
Anthem matching
June 2, 2009
My Tandberg 3012 integrated amp put in 20+
years of hard work, but is ready to retire. Would the Anthem Integrated 225 be a good
match for my recently purchased Canton GLE 490 speakers? Other suggestions?
Thanks,
Martin Bradley
I would have suggested Anthems Integrated 225 had
you not mentioned it. Its an affordable integrated amplifier that delivers plenty of
power (225Wpc) and, according to Philip
Beaudettes review, sounds great. The Integrated 225 seems like one of the best
deals out there today.
I looked up the specifications for your speakers and it
appears like they will like the power the 225 can deliver. The 490 is a reasonably large
speaker with a number of drivers. Based on my experience, multi-driver speakers do better
with more power, not less. According to the companys specs, the 490s impedance
is said to hover between 4 and 8 ohms, and it can handle 150W continuously and 320W on
musical peaks. The Integrated 225 has more than enough power to drive them. This means
that you should never fully tax the 255 and drive it into clipping. Based on the numbers,
this seems like a good match.
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