soundhound
Well-Known Member
By request, I'm porting over a thread I started from the S&V forum. I wish there was a way to capture the entire thread and bring it here, but hopefully we can start a discussion again on the subject of small verses large speakers, and specifically, how important is a sense of scale in Hi-Fi reproduction?
Not surprisingly, I feel that just like accurate frequency response and the ability to project a good soundstage, the ability to recreate an appropriately-sized sense of the scale of the original performers and venue is vital if we are to have real high fidelity reproduction.
Today's small speakers exist because of home theater. It was realized early on by manufacturers that there way no way that the then-new concept of home theater would take hold if users were required to have 5 "regular" sized speakers (i.e. the "norm" of the stereo period which was 12" woofers in a much larger cabinet) in their living rooms. Wives in particular would freak out. Home theater would be a non-starter. DOA.
However, they cannot reproduce a realistic sense of scale, no matter how well engineered they may be.
I've always believed that the goal of Hi-Fi was literal - the exact reproduction in all aspects of a performer in the listener's room, and this includes the apparent size of the performers to match what they would actually be. In other words, a sense of scale.
So my question is, just what are your expectations of what High Fidelity can accomplish, and which of those aspects are really necessary to you?
Not surprisingly, I feel that just like accurate frequency response and the ability to project a good soundstage, the ability to recreate an appropriately-sized sense of the scale of the original performers and venue is vital if we are to have real high fidelity reproduction.
Today's small speakers exist because of home theater. It was realized early on by manufacturers that there way no way that the then-new concept of home theater would take hold if users were required to have 5 "regular" sized speakers (i.e. the "norm" of the stereo period which was 12" woofers in a much larger cabinet) in their living rooms. Wives in particular would freak out. Home theater would be a non-starter. DOA.
However, they cannot reproduce a realistic sense of scale, no matter how well engineered they may be.
I've always believed that the goal of Hi-Fi was literal - the exact reproduction in all aspects of a performer in the listener's room, and this includes the apparent size of the performers to match what they would actually be. In other words, a sense of scale.
So my question is, just what are your expectations of what High Fidelity can accomplish, and which of those aspects are really necessary to you?