Description

How much your system costs does not necessarily translate into how well its going to sound.

I try to make a conscious effort to remember that but sometimes fail. As audiophiles i think we are often frustrated by the maze of hifi and when we get in a desperate place we throw more money at the problem believing this might help us make sonic headway and make us happy with our systems.

Inexpensive systems can be very musical and very enjoyable, maybe not the most refined but nevertheless the most important thing is that it is musical.

Systems can be extremely expensive yet not be as musical as a system that is a quarter of its price.

Each audiophile has different needs and different expectations and to

varying degrees. So, when some have reached a certain level of

playback they are satisfied and their done.

My experience has been that digital is easier to work with. And right

now i'm strictly talking about sonics. With digital its easier to get

92 percent of the sonic envelope right 95 percent of the time with

less effort than vinyl but then... i think you are stuck at that level

and cant go up any higher because of the format.But most will probably

be content at this level because you're getting most of the music and

getting it CONSISTENTLY at that level. Thats what is enjoyed. A

relatively high degree of playback with good consistency. You just cue

up the digital and press play.

Because my primary audiophile value is timbre i go with vinyl to the

exclusion of digital. My bias is that in this respect vinyl has a much

higher potential to BE superior, though because of the nature of its

higher requirements to be played back optimally it often fails to live

up to its reputation because its potential has not been extracted. If

you work really hard at getting the best digital and really hard at

getting the best vinyl, i think you will get better sound from the

vinyl.

Someone once said..."the easiest thing to do in the world is to play a

record wrong!"

I laugh at that mostly because of all the effort and frustration i've

experienced as i try to learn the art of playing back a record at high

levels. I think its a long road and there are many fine adjustments

and factors that can change one or the other parameter of the musical

envelope when you play a record back. But the quote is so true and for

some all the work of finding out how to get optimal playback isnt a

worthy pursuit and too hard a road to hough! Many, including myself

sometimes doubt its extreme potential of being the best format.

I can play back my whole record collection as is and enjoy the music

of every record but when i put on my "extreme audio hat" and i am

striving for the BEST possible tonal richness and dynamics , to my

mind i necessarily must go to vinyl for that. I just haven't been

persuaded that digital can produce the KINDS of timbre that optimized

vinyl can. That's my personal bias.

I believe that a combination of the best thought out component

designs, a deep understanding of set up, a critical look at materials

utilized, will yield that goal of the highest level of tonal richness

and dynamics in playback. Tape wears overtime and you can get a

million playbacks on vinyl without any meaningful loss of sonic

quality. Another check mark for vinyl!

By this.... i believe i'm staying on and persevering for that last 8

percent that i believe to be only available from the format of vinyl.

That last bit is where i believe the 'magical' part of music lives.

That last little bit is sensitive and fragile and its spell is easily

lost or broken if everything isnt just right.

A harmonica is a melancholy instrument. It has a lonely and sad sound.

But that loneliness is INHERENT in the MATERIALS it is made from and

how they vibrate. I can't play the harmonica well but i am trying to

learn to play it much better. If i just pick any spot and blow one or

two notes, i hear that loneliness in its sound, its not my playing

that brings that lonely sound its the materials of the instrument

itself that create the emotion of melancholy! If i am right about this

then it can be said that each instruments MATERIAL RESONANCE SIGNATURE

and how its configured has its EMOTIONAL COUNTERPART in the range of

human emotions.

If i am not reproducing those timbres in my system accurately i'm not

really going feel its emotional counterpart. In other words... the

degree to which i am able to faithfully reproduce accurately a

materials resonance signature, ie its timbre, is the degree to which

i will experience its emotional counterpart or NOT experience it.

Again we're talking levels and leagues. The allaerts cart was a "game

changer" for me in this regard. I can hear the steel reeds as well as

the synthetic comb of the harmonica. I hear its woodiness and its

shiny clean metal at the same time. I hear an accuracy and trueness in

the speed at which those reeds vibrate that are true to life. This

produces the melancholy sound and hence the emotional response to it.

I think thats called "music"? (smile) So, for me the rendering of true

timbres is an area that i cannot compromise, as i try to be an

audiophile(smiling)...Someone who puts high priority on the

faithfulness at which music is played back.

My system nails that timbre like i feel digital cant. All this i know

will sound like just words and talk, and i didnt know til i heard it

myself. But if you never heard it you wouldnt know to miss it. Thats

how i was and maybe you too at one point. To use another analogy if

you told me in words about your hometown i could never really know it

til i visited.

I think its fair to say i get a kick out of 'extreme vinyl'.

Even though its more work, more expensive and its easier to get wrong

than digital its still worth it.

If i may...here's why i think vinyl is the inherently better format

from a strictly sonic evaluation.

Because the format itself is 'materials and resonance dependent' which

is what real music is made from, whether its the vibrating vocal cords

of a singer or the resonance of a acoustic guitar body. Both are

MATERIALS RESONATING.

So, the natural mechanical vibration of a well designed stylus has an

advantage over a digital laser because it too is material and resonant

dependent therefore it has the inherent potential to mimick reality

better. With digital it isnt really dependent on the resonance quality

inherent in a material. All this happens, importantly i think, at the

front end of the musical playback chain!

Because this is the case cartridge designers consider different

materials and how those materials can best replicate timbres when they

are deciding on a material for the cartridge body.Well, actually i

havent talked to any designers and i'm not one myself (smile) but that

is what i have observed and deduced since i see cartridge designers

using all kinds of different materials to give their cartridges a

certain tone.

Even with the best digital playback i am of the opinion that timbres

are somewhat and to small degrees still greyed or bleached out and not

as rich,dense and compacted in regard to timbre, unlike with some

incarnations of vinyl playback. It isnt as silky and as dense

timbrally with digital.

I've recently got into nirvana of all things. what a surprise. Anyways

if i want a original pressing i have to pay maybe 35-55 bucks on ebay

for it! Thats nuts! When i can find a used cd of the same album in a

pawn shop for maybe 3 bucks? Is it worth it? I wouldnt even consider

it if i didnt hear what the allaerts and the rest of my system pulling

as a team can do. It can make it seem like it IS in fact worth it. But

on a day where some parameter is slightly out it will make me have my

doubts!(smiling)This proves to be a momentary set back and the next

day i get back on the horse so ta speak.

The kick i get out of trying to get 'extreme playback' is why i might

pay that much for a record, the pursuit of 'the best' on the planet is

fun! plus if i have a change of heart i can always decide to sell it

ALL and just get an ipod!

****i cant get no satisfaction****

Paradoxically, not getting 'any' satisfaction is GIVING me some! As

the pursuit plays some part in the source of some of the pleasure.

So, the lack of satisfaction makes me work harder and i end up making

headway and do get great results. Who said stellar playback was going

to be easy or cheap anyways?

I like 'gear'... talking about it, looking at them and of course

hearing them. Their physical as well as their sonic prowess bring me

pleasure.

The love hate relationship is part of the fun! I like a sound that

exudes sophistication, quietness and power. A system that produces a

sound that reveals subtle and complex layers but on more than one

level so that you are consistently getting new ideas of the artists

artistic intention and hopefully never exhausting its possible

interpretations of the same track!

My two highest audiohphile values are 1. Timbre and 2. Dynamics...

Vibration is matter in motion in time.

Sometimes i see my system as many parts working as a undivided whole.

You can't find the boundary of how one components sounds in isolation

of the other? That mysterious relationship between material objects

and a spiritual experience and how the boundaries become blurred is

very intriguing and fascinating to me. You could say they are a

symphony of materials, electricity (whatever IT is?), materials, ie,

wood, mdf, slate, gold, silver, corian, gyproc, carpet, brass, vinyl,

diamond, boron... excited to push air at a certain pressure and

frequency, in a certain fashion. And all that translates hopefully

into a spiritual counterpart.

If you will....Good systems are like shaman's, inducing the spirit of

music and entering an altered state!

It's like the police album "the ghost in the machine" or Descartes old

"mind body" argument.

A more popular phrase is, "the gear just disappears!"

No, i havent arrived but more than ever and on a more consistent basis

i get that quality. More than i would have believed if someone told me

about it 3 years ago. So in that sense i have in fact arrived

somewhere, am very happy at where i am in terms of my system and for

the fact that i still have the privilege and fun to be able to still

strive for more. I look forward to that.

This is how i see it and what i think. I'm not saying i'm right but

that is how i look at audio reproduction.

Thanks for visiting here and thank you for being an audiophile! its

good having you around!
Read more...

Components Toggle details

    • Jan Allaerts MC 1B Mk II Cartridge
    If its in good company, a good amp, a good preamp, a good arm, good speakers, the higher up the better, it will allow this cart to shine. On lesser electronics, i was wasting my money running it. So it needs good company to show what it can do. In conjunction with good company i cant believe what it can do to render, harmonica, saxophone and voices. Those metal reeds in a harmonica sound so very real, like i can see feel and hear them moving and vibrating. Til i hear something better, to ME it sounds grain less. I have found its reproduction of timbres to be very sensitive to VTA. Too high and things become greyed, the "beauty","the magic" disappears. When i got into "hifi" in 2004 i expected the denon 103 to do what the allaerts mc1b mk2 can do. I had no idea! My personal opinion today is, that the REAL "hifi" is in the upper echelon of gear. The best testimony i can give to this cartridge is to say that if i had purchased this cartridge from the first i never would have become so jaded by products peddled as hi fi. This cart IS hifi. The allaerts can do ACDC very well too, that is... it can "growl"! but its FORTE probably leans very slightly more to Jazz, folk and classical and when it plays these genres its plays it at the level in the "class A, of Class A's". Rated life expectancy is ONLY about 7000hrs [its not fair!]. I keep a log. Describe a fine piece of 18ct gold jewelery and that is what it sounds like, to me, in my system. Rich, pure, lush, agile, delicate, gentle,seductive, powerful! and Beautiful. This cartridge is special from all others in that it uses solid 14 ct. gold binding posts. The inherent advantages of utilizing this material I think is what is contributing to it very unique sonic signature.
    • Breuer 8c Mk II Tonearm
    Swiss made. Built within extremely fine tolerances and with fine craftsmanship. At the moment i use all the dynamic tracking force available and the rest with the static weight on the back. I found this to reveal more information, inflections and nuances from the grooves, as opposed to going with less dynamic vtf and more static. It was designed with no armlift because it was said or believed that it would compromise its performance. I like their gusto! Its Sound, within the context of my system: Very agile, extreme transient responsiveness , gives ITS take on… "beautiful" music playback. It has a wonderful speed, resolution and timbrel realism within its inherent design limitations. Extremely low bearing friction so that it allows the cart to traverse the record unimpeded. No Din connection on this one. Only connections are from cartridge terminals to RCA’s, that it. Its got cardas copper wiring. Because it works so well with the allaerts its staying! For awhile anyways. It nicely seasons the allaerts beauty, dynamics and lushness with MORE dynamics and reels things in a bit with its NEUTRALITY. Its like the Breuer is MATH [which in its own way is beautiful, [but it’s a different kind of beauty]] and the Allaerts MC 1B MK II is Art. One kind of beauty appeals to the head and the other to the Soul. Put those two together and you have something wonderful, special and unique. These are just words though...when the stylus hits the grooves, the words disappear, the arm disappears and suddenly youre in a another realm. After all why do you think you're attracted to music?
    • Luxman PD-444 Japanese
    Great table.
    • Lenco 78 Swiss Record Player
    (Origin arm in picture has a new owner) I kept the original metal chassis cause i preferred its looks to a ptp3. Uk plastercine on both sides of the chassis and the aluminum platter to
    • Audion 2 Box Quattro Pre-amp
    Design Features: 17 active power supply stages, Hardwired in solid silver.Transformer less design direct cathode coupled mc!

    My unit is fitted with all Amperex white label, made in USA,
    • Audion Elite 3 Box Monoblock Amplifier
    General features: Operates in Pure Class A using the strong 845 tube. Output is 25 watts per channel. Additional tubes utilized…the 6922 tube and e182cc tube. Hardwired in pure silver, uncongested wiring layouts, minimalist sparse wiring keeping the circuits beautifully simple, spaced for improved signal to noise ratio, carefully selected parts, separately boxed transformer chassis attached by umbilical cords, heavy gold plated rca and speaker taps, chassis made of annealed, thick, aluminum. W9xL16xH7 inch chassis's. Specific to this particular unit: Half silver wound output transformer. Sound: I think its greatest strengths are its high degree of clarity, transparency, and speed. Bass with excellent weight and foundation , its special in that it isnt plagued with the typical poor bass of many Class A tubed designs. I think every amp or component has its own signature. I define SIGNATURE as …the CONTEXT a component utilizes as a means of providing an interpretation of the music. So with that said, I would say the Audion Elite’s signature is …a striving for purity of tone, uncoloredness, rich neutral timbres and textures mixed with a very fast transient response. Sometimes the best way to understand something is to look at its opposite. Its tone is the polar opposite of…dark. Dark being…failed transparency and failed speed which in turn fails to serve the music . Instead, the Elite is uncannily clear and fast. The air it produces within a soundstage is ALIVE not dead stale air or stagnent air that I’ve heard some amps produce. A amps portrayal of AIR is something that I think is ESSENTIAL to capture the ALIVENESS of music. Go to a concert in a large hall space and listen when there is no music being played on stage. Even though there is no artist playing on stage you can still HEAR the AIR in the room . Well, I think this amp portrays AIR very beautifully. This sounds like nothing to go on about but I think this is one of many very important components to recreating a pleasing sound during playback and mimicking real life. I wont come close to exhausting this amps sonic attributes here… this is simply meant to give a general overview of my feelings about the amp based on the 4 years i've owned it [since 2007]. Even today i am still continuing to form my opinion about it and where it fits on the spectrum of world class amps as my exposure to other amps broaden's and my listening ear develops. The audion elite is a refined, sophisticated well designed, world class amp. Together with the rest of my system, working as one, it sounds colorless and just disappears once the music starts. I’ll be conservative and hold back my enthusiasm by only saying its sounds VERY close to… sounding like…nothing. A fine amp.
    • Tube Compliment
    In the Audion Elites:

    KR845's (new brass bottom version) Nos Mullards gold pin E188c and Amperex PQ 6922's ,white shield made in USA.

    Comments: The KR845's provide large solid three dimensional images that are extremely lifelike. I found them to be more articulate and expressive than the 845B tube. They are a bit more objective than the pleasantly warm 845B. The KR845 is very dynamic. Fascinating tube. I found it sounds best when pushed harder. Its like its envelope blossomed when pushed. (around 80db)

    In the Audion Quattro: 8 Amperex PQ white shield 7308, made in USA tubes. Don't judge an Audion quattro without good tubes! It is very transparent. The PQ's forte are dynamics and clarity.

    This system is just ho hum without the right tubes! I think it is sounding quite amazing these days with the above tubes.
    • The Cables
    I see cables for the most part as… tone controls. I also think of cables as fine seasonings. By fine seasonings I mean that they are not the …meat and potatoes, of the system rather they are the final FINE tiny changes that you use to dial in, tweak to compliment the components that you have assembled. But fine seasoning like in real cooking can make or break a dish. It wont change the meal into some other dish but you might fail to realize the inherent potential of a system with the wrong cables between the wrong components. Sometimes going from one cable to another or placing a cable in a different spot in the system you get negligible results but sometimes small changes in SYNERGY can make dramatic changes in their sonic emotional impact. Superb sound is a fragile thing! I think the right cables help great components shine and reveal their virtues. Cables are components helpers. I’ve been theorizing that perhaps the mixing of variety of metals is vitally important for achieving breakthrough or at least close to perfect sound. So, an all copper wired system wont sound as good as a system with a blend of copper, silver and gold, mixed carefully, in the right proportions... in a system... by ear. So , when I consider my system, I ask myself what material is this cable made from? how much of it is in that cable? how many different metals am I using as a conductor in my system? and in what quantities? Where am I using it and might there be a better spot to use it? Here is some speculation on what I think these metals basically sound like. [I am generalizing.] Gold: Lush, beautiful, euphonic, wet, nimble, soft Silver: Transparent, airy, very fast, detailed Copper: relaxed, moderately transparent, average speeds Here are my cables and the metals they are constructed from and in what quantity. List of the Copper Cables: FiM Gold speaker cables: [Huge quantities [fat copper, solid core]] Between Audion amp speaker taps[which is internally silver wired]and Reference 3A Royal Virtuoso’s bass, speaker posts. Vh audio airsine power cord: [Small quantities, relatively thin wire][Location…Between power box and Audion Elite Center chassis where transformer is located in isolation.[internally silver wired] Vh audio Airsine power cord: [small quantities, relatively thin wire][location…Between Acoustic Revive RTP-4 power conditioner [copper wired] and Right channel of Audion quattro 2 box preamp [silver wired] Cardas tonearm cable: [Tiny and thin] [location…between cardas cartridge clips and eichmann bullet rca connectors] Generic cable: [small, thin, impure] [Between oyaide silver plated wall receptacle and lenco motor] Cardas Golden Reference: [average wire thickness and quantities][location…Between Acoustic Revive RTP 4 power conditioner and Left channel of Audion quattro 2 box preamp [silver wired] Cardas Golden Reference: [average wire thickness and quantities][Location…Between power box and Acoustic Revive RTP 4 power conditioner [copper wired] Generic wired power box: [average thickness and quantities][Location…Between Amp / RTP conditioner and Stove Receptacle. List of Silver cables: Acoustic Zen Silver Reference II [small quantities, relatively thin] [Location…Between Audion elite amp [internally silver wired] and Audion quattro 2 box preamp [internally silver wired] List of Silver over Copper cables: Jean-Marie Reynaud jumpers:< [Small quantities, relatively thin][Location…Between Bass and Treble speaker posts. Note:The system is mostly comprised of copper and silver. The only Gold is located in the Jan allaerts MC 1B MK II [copper coil windings]. Its connecting posts uses some 14ct, solid gold. Does the fact that the gold is solid and not plated and the fact that it is at the very front of the playback chain play a pivotal role or a negligible role?
    • Snell C IV Speaker
    Simple. Satisfying. Natural sounding speaker.
    • Good Vibrations
    The following are used in various places to control how vibration interface with components. Over 3 inch rock maple board. One inch slate shelving. Aurios classic bearings. Large 13 ounce brass cones. Herbies Grundgebusters. Duelende tube rings. Turntable wallmounted shelf.
    • Electrical Editing
    By the: Acoustic Revive RTP 4 passive power conditioner. In a nutshell, this thing works! Its not snake oil. I burned a lot of calories, pulling cables into and out of it as I A/B/A tested this. Several times too. Listening to a variety of different generes and records. In the context of my system there were too many drawbacks having the amp plugged into it, namely a significant loss in Macrodynamics, impact and soundstage but not so with the preamps. With the RTP 4 in the system [ only the Audion quattro preamps plugged in and nothing else] there is a few degrees of loss in the area of macrodynamics and inner detail but quality of timbres were much more natural and satisfying. A mechanical, lifeless hash enmeshed between soundstage details was replaced with a sense of organic wholeness and rightness. Like going from listening to a older master analog tape to a fresh analog mastertape, though again there is a slight loss of inner detail. This loss, was…. Negligable, because…. you are left with something so much more satisfying. The RTP is like an "editor" in the movieroom. He takes the bulk of the film, decides whats important, leaves in the bulk of whats important and cuts out some bits of the film but in the end it makes for an overall better final watching of the movie. To do this he has to sacrifice some important bits but overall its make for a better movie. More pleasurable. Without the RTP there is more detail but timbres arent as tonally dense, rich and satisfying. Timbrel beauty is lost. Without the RTP4 there is a slight bleaching of timbres , a slightly larger soundstage, increase in detail and macrodynamics. It is not that there is more actual physical impact... because with the rtp it does this just fine but without the rtp … with the micro and macrodynamic detail a subjective experience of more dynamics is perceived. There is more resolution but the information that is retrieved fails to convince. It comes across slightly as "manufactured" sound without the RTP. The RTP is a great piece. I guess it has a tough job to do. Maintain ALL the dynamics, resolution AND clean up the noise and improve timbre. In the process of cleaning up the noise it seems to catch things in its net that it never intended but unfortunately does. But its benefits outweigh its faults. Timbre and tonality are more an important audiophile value to me and worth the few degrees of loss in the area of detail and dynamics. The improvement in the area of timbres is more valuable than the slight loss of detail. The extra detail is no good to me if the timbres aren’t exhilerating! What’s the use? The RTP feeding only the preamps provides blacker backgrounds, improves timbres, slightly changes your experience of the soundstage for the Good! It’s relatively expensive but it makes the other pieces in my system seem more valuable as they are allowed to sound better. Experiencing what I experienced I could not go without it. Small, subtle but very meaningful improvements.
    • A Space to.... 'woo the music...to come.'
    Music kinda has a life all its own doesn't it? Its like it's a separate entity...its going to do whatever it wants and sometimes "it shows up and sometimes it doesn't!" But when it comes you're transported aren't you? The gear disappears as the music enters the room. Well... i try to do things to the room so that the music "will want" to show up here! [smile] The Room. Often over looked or forgotten altogether is the place... WHERE the equipment has to play and how well or poorly it is interfacing with that room? Here's the little bit that i've picked up over the years. The shapes of rooms, the materials they're constructed from, the materials that cover or don't cover the wall, floor and ceilings.... where speakers are placed in that room and whether or not the first reflections are treated are very important for good music playback. I have gleaned some of the books and online sources about this topic which can get very sophisticated and technical. Some of it i understood and some of it was starting to give me a headache [smiling] but i did take away some basic useful info that i could easily apply and use to help make the hifi system sound as best as it can. One of the reasons why i have listed "the room" as one of the components in my "systems list" is so that those who don't already know, or to whom it even has not entered their mind... your room, really and truly is a part of your SYSTEM ...and... it is a vital 'component!' The second reason is to re remind myself of that fact and so that overtime i dont forget to remember [smiling] and so i can re visit the question of "room treatment" again when time permits and when the feeling comes to do so...to do it! Room Facts: 17L x 13W x 8H in feet. [opened to other living areas] Wood framed,insulated with gypsum board for walls and ceiling. Floor is all wood, suspended, covered by synthetic 3/4 inch carpet. 4 by 5 FT window in the left side of the front wall 7 by 7 FT glass slide door in the center of the right side wall open hallway entrance at the far left of the back wall 7 by 7 FT opening to the kitchen area directly to the right and behind the listening position The size of the room is ok in that it is not a perfect square. That would be a "tougher" room to work with. The walls and the short synthetic carpet make it a very reflective, ie "live" room. In other words, frequencies that emanate from the speakers are able to hit one wall, bounce, hit another wall, repeating, colliding with other frequencies, at different points in the room, amplifying or canceling a certain, frequency, then in time, those begin colliding with new info that leave the speaker and then colliding with those too! So, what you get, through no fault of the components, is varying degrees of distortion. What I've done to try and ameliorate this is to treat one of the two parallel walls with 4 inches of a special brand of fiberglass called "Rigid Fiberglass" I think its called 703k or 705k. Both are the same product. I have two, 2FT by 4FT by 4 inches sheets on the right side wall and two of the same on the wall directly behind my listening position. I covered it with a loosely stitched cloth [ if they are too tight the material itself will be reflective! and the fiberglass can't do what it is meant to do] First Reflections: First reflections are the first reflected sounds that hit you from the closest surfaces from the floor, side walls and ceiling. Sound travels in a straight line like light, so to treat your first reflections points or to find where exactly they are.... put a chair with a mirror on it at the side wall. Do you see your speakers woofer and tweeter from your seating position? Where you see the speaker in the mirror is where you should add a absorptive material or a diffuser. I use absorption. ie the rigid fibreglass. I have two, 1FT by 2FT by 2 inch thick sheets treating the first reflections on my ceiling. I also have two that are movable for side wall first reflections. Because i have a 37 inch TV in the center and behind the speakers i also have a sheet that is removable which i place over the tv screens hard reflective surface when i listen so that it does not destroy the centre image focus. Hard, parallel surfaces are the enemy so to speak. If you had wall to wall of 5 inch wool you would have no reflective surfaces in your room. It would be very dead. One time out of curiosity i thumb tacked all the sleeping bags and thick blankets i had to the wall, floor and ceiling and listened to the system like that! The room looked like a room for the audio insane! [laughing, smiling] It was pretty dark too! Anyways...that produced a profound change in the sound and it was an interesting little wild experiment that spoke volumes to me about how you're not just listening to a cart, or arm or amp or a speaker, you are listening to those as a system as they interact with what you've got going on in your room!...for the better or for the worse[ or for the mediocre]. Many a great speaker has been sold due to poor rooms! So when you listen to your amp in some sense you are really also listening to your room. When you are listening to a cartridge you in some sense are really also listening to your room. etc etc. Why does treating first reflections help? When the woofer pulsates in and out once it sends out some sound but it disperses the sound out in a spray patterned shape. Some of the sound goes directly from the woofer to your ear at the listening position BUT... others travel [with the same initial action] from the woofer, to the wall, THEN to your ear ....at the listening position. The time and the release of the initial woofer pulse leaves the same time for both but one has to travel a longer distance therefore it arrives slightly late! Thats the key! The energy arriving from first reflections has the most energy because they have not had time to lose their energy by travelling throughout the room repeated times and therefore has a higher capacity to introduce distortion, that is why treating first reflections helps and why it is important to do so. Treating first reflections in the context of my system increased soundstage resolution, image focus and musical and spacial cues by a few ...."perceptible and meaningful" percentages. It was easily discernible but not profound but worth doing if you want to extract every detail out of your system as best as you can and know how to. I am still considering if my room would benefit from even more absorption of sound waves or not. I'm sure i can still improve on what i've got but i think i got the bulk of it attended to. I listen on a "long wall" set up. My speakers are currently about 3 and a half feet out from the front wall and toed in a few degrees. I use a 3 dollar dog laser against the speaker cabinets to perfectly align them to my listening position. I use a level to make sure the speakers are firing identically ahead in the same fashion as each other and i make sure their distance from the front wall are identical with a tape measure. I have heard it is better to have your speakers more than a few inches "off center" in the room. [ i cant remember why but the source i remember seemed reliable] The walls, floor and ceiling: I'm sure with low bass my wood and gypsum combo produce a drum skin affect. That is the wall are not very inert and depending on the decibels they can act a bit like a woofer. Maybe brick would be more ideal, but i dont know, harbeth designs their speaker to vibrate a certain way as a virtue in their design ? they "tune" their cabinets to vibrate in such a fashion to produce what they perceive is a pleasing sound? So belong to the "dial in the ideal vibration camp" Not the "dead is best camp". Can a wall be too dead? I think the question looks easy to answer but i venture it is more complicated then some might think. I DO know that my suspended wood floor will effect how my speakers perform.... for better or for worse. I am exploring and experimenting with different materials between the two to see which brings out the best in the overall sound. My room has a sofa, tv, some pictures on the walls, a small record shelf, some plants and a few other pieces of furniture which help a bit to reduce unwanted reflections by diffusing "secondary and third" reflections and reducing the "liveliness" of the room to some degree. I say... tune with your ear! Your room can sound too dead or too alive! My turntable sits about 6 inches from the front wall supported by a wall shelf. They say bass pressure builds up around the walls so one ideally should keep the player at least 8 inches from the wall if possible and never in the corners of rooms...its even worse there! I can literally jump up and down a distance of 2 feet on my suspended floor and not have the cartridge skip. Not bad! If i wanted i could have a dance party here and the footfall would not affect play at all. I like that. Before i have a "serious" [smile] listening sessions, I ... 1.Remove my 2 canaries. [ they love to sing when it gets noisy!][sometimes i just leave them to sing out!] 2.Set up my movable first reflection absorbers 3. Unplug the fridge so the motor doesnt make noise [this makes a difference]or pollute the ac line 4. Close windows to block out noise pollution I haven't used computers to find an ideal space in my room based on room dimensions and speaker type, I have placed them simply where they allow for good walking flow in the room, where i spend a lot of time and with that as a baseline i move them around a bit to find the best sound based on listening. This has worked out for me alright i think and i am pretty happy with the sound of my system in this room. No system is complete without thought taken in regards to... "the room" [as described above] and speaker placement experimentation[listening position too]. The room should be a visually appealing place to YOU, with appealing lighting, quiet and attended to in such a fashion that the system can shine, this together facilitates the likelihood of... "the music entering the room". [not just...noise] [i'm trying.]
    • Unorthodox but Seriously Fun experimentations
    The final acceptance or rejection of an experiment is based solely on how it sounds, irregardless of looks or price or whether it is endorsed by any other audiophile or manufacturer or not, irregardless of spurious logical assumptions about whether or not it should or should not work. How it sounds with the rest of my original system and components and trusting myself and my own ears will be the deciding factor. More to follow, check back if you like: 1. Record Mats The interface between record, platter, mat and cartridge is a very sensitive area and can bring small, negligable or sometimes profound changes emanating from the speakers. My modded lenco platter. i have both sides of this ringy platter already damped with uk plasticine. i will experiment to extract as much as i can through its use by trying several different "incarnations" of its implementation. currently i am using something very unorthodox but it is working for me. so, the top of my lenco platter has uk plasticine. then i have the stock lenco rubber mat. On top of that i have two graphite wall receptacle covers! attached via plasticine, then next to those two, two neoprene rubber circles about 2 inches in diameter and 4mm thick attached the same way. Best of both worlds. deadening with a bit of rubber and low mass draining by the receptacle plates. better than felt better than just rubber good resolution and maintains the integrity of timbres.
    • Record cleaning...
    I buy records that look like they have a good chance of having quiet grooves. Usually buying AT LEAST vg+ in appearance records. Usually NM though. Then i only clean the dust off the SURFACE. I almost never scrub grooves , ONLY remove surface dust with the edge of a miki WHISKEY bottle, a guitar polishing cloth and distilled water, added with a syringe to the edge. I makes sure there is a liberal amount of water on the edge so that dust will stick to it. It is the short, narrow, convex side of the bottle not the wide side that i use to clean with. It's works well because of it is curved shaped. I lower the bottle and make sure i have the entire width of the record surface covered and hold the bottle at a about a 60 degree angle leaning it to the side that has the record traveling into it. Then i hold the bottle as still as possible and with my other hand rotate the record. As i am rotating the record i slowly change the angle going from 60 degrees to about 110 degrees. This way each area of the record is assured to get a fresh section of cleaning cloth area as the record is rotating and i am not just redistributing piled up dirt! To do another side i then shift the cleaning cloth a bit and add a fresh shot of water and now its ready again for another pass. After cleanings i let the cloth dry, then i whip it against something hard and back and forth a few times to beat the larger loose particles of dust away. This is good enough because the next time i go to clean i add distilled water and anything that got left behind will stay with the fresh water applied. If the cloth is getting a bit stained and too dirty i will then actually give it a good washing in dish soap and then let it air dry. The cloth is stored in a sealed plastic bag to protect it from house dust when not in use. I have two different cloths for different uses. One i call "fine" which is for light surface dust and one called "bulk" which i reserve for record surfaces that have quite a bit of dirt on their surface. I clean one side. Remove the record, resting its label on a glass or mug, while I clean the mat on the record cleaner that will accept the JUST CLEANED side of the record. This way the dirt from the uncleaned side which was just sitting on and against the mat does not pollute the just cleaned side when i go to clean the uncleaned side! No cross contamination. Thats about it. If some records have dirty grooves i let my cheaper denon 103 cart do the job of "kicking up and out" dirt and grit out of the grooves and onto the records surface and then clean as indicated above. I play the record through again with the denon 103 and again see dirt but this time much less. I Clean again. Several cycles of this cleans the actual grooves and from there I determine if the record is a keeper or if it will be sold or given away if groove noise is too high and beyond repair. I picked up the cleaner already built at a second hand store for a whopping $20. This approach is all about starting with records that are already in close to superb condition, avoiding cross contamination and using something 'sticky' as a method of removing dirt, dust and the occasional cat hair. The ionic bonding or in other words what i'll call 'the stickiness of water'is superior to a DRY carbon fibre brush which will get the bulk of dust off but unfortunately also at the same time pushes some bits into the grooves or leaves some of them behind altogether. Not so with my method. Its like a 'renewable dust magnet' I try to only let the good clean records reach the Allaerts MC1B MK2.

Comments 11

Owner
Using Fim Gold speaker cables now as primary cables, instead of the fim silver. The differences are pretty negligible and in different systems one or the other might come out winner.

vertigo

Owner
Recently compared the vh audio flavour 4's to a pair of airsines going into the quattro's. This was an upgrade!

vertigo

Owner
Hi Mark,

Thanks for your kind comments. I'm glad you enjoyed in some way some part of my system.

I do explore tweaks from time to time. Sometimes hifi bores me. I like to forget about it for a while then i come back to it hopefully refreshed.

On my computer i have a "things to do" file for hifi. Building my own shun mok record clamp out of ebony is one of the things i have written down there. We'll see if the project ever materializes!

I know some of my system posts will be perceived by some as being a bit out there! but really i'm a pretty sane person, just looking for a new angle and a bit of fun. Some of my posts are very unedited and sort of "free writing".

Sometimes its good to think outside of the box and sometimes it isnt.

I like :

The wild geese do not intend to cast their reflections,
The water has no mind to receive their images.

Beauty....

Thanks!

vertigo

Vertigo, wonderful postings. I like the most, "Vibration is matter in motion in time," Yes, vibration is matter- in-motion-in-time, no separation.

And, yes, you are creating an energy-instrument; each stereo component itself a creative reflection of the mind that created it and, you, creatively melding those minds/visions into something else. The result not separate from those individual visions, but, together, in concert, so to speak, hopefully exceeding in whole the sum of those parts.

Like making a good stew. And, as with stews, the empiric injunction, its test-ing, occurs when you close your eyes and smell.

When people close their eyes, depending on where they are, their minds smell/see/hear/experience different aperceptions of things/energy/time, or in our cases, differing depths of musical perception.

Anyway, your system is quite stable, so you might want to think about some "tweeks" around the edges - ones that can easliy be removed from the stew, if ineffectual. Take a look at some Shun Mook M'pingo discs - on top of the speakers, move them around, change their orientaion, then try on the TT, move one around. $50 used a pop, get 4, so not a big $ outlay there. As with things, their effects can be good or bad. In some applications, like the lid of my CD player, they compress dynamics. But on my speakers, they enrich harmonic complexity and spatial realism without a loss elsewhere - something that you know can be an increasingly difficult result to find. Just a cheap, fun idea...

Here, I submit the following for your perception/stew: if you can make your system-of-energy-things sound like this, then you are getting closer. Don't think about it; it has no answer. Just smell:

The wild geese do not intend to cast their reflections,
The water has no mind to receive their images.

Beauty....

Regards, Mark

asa

Owner
Here's the Excerpt from the 7 page recipe i mentioned in the previous post:

*******Jean Nantais writes: "Krenzler, avoiding rubber does not apply to your lenco. The woodscrews pass through the rubber to bite into the wooden plinth itself, and so couples the lenco proper to the wood of the plinth with extreme effectiveness, the rubber merely providing the needed support and damping of the ringy metal top plate. In other words, your lenco top plate is directly coupled to the wood, not the rubber, which acts as a simple shim. In my own comparisons, there was a change of flavour but no sonic penalty as-is with rubber. I've heard that particular lenco several times in an extremely revealing system (modded quad esl 57's, rebuilt vintage quad tube amps or original marantz 8, either ar sp9 mk2 or dolan preamp) and it was chock full of PRaT, detail, bass and dynamics. The oracle dephi mk4 was sold, the sota was sold, a linn lp12 passed through with lightspeed, and even the technics sp10 mk2 in 80 pound plinth vs. lenco 40 pound plinth couldnt match it. ******

vertigo

Owner
Hi Lewm

***you may also recover the "resolution and timbrel realism" that you suspect is missing.***

My original comment was actually in regard to the differences i think you get using a slate lenco or a birch ply mdf plinth and not on what effect i think the rubber sheet has...nevertheless, i suppose your suggestion is worth experimenting with. The context of my speculation about how the differences of slate or wood is based upon one gentleman who commented on the differences he heard when he went to a slate plinth from the kind i have. Basically he thought that "maybe the noise floor is a bit lower but that if he could do it all again he would have probably just stayed with the wood plinth because its easier to work with"

I appreciated his comments as they're a good starting point for considering how i might proceed next or not. So, i basically think that my plinth adds positive warmth over slate, in degrees... how much? its difficult to put a figure on it but more importantly i think is how that warmth "mixes" with my other components sonic contributions and how they will determine my final sonic results is the key issue. Also, i have read where one audiogoner could appreciate both his acustic table [very quiet damped] as well as his friends idler drive in wood[more noise but musical in a different sense]. This too takes away any sense of pressure , that if i dont have slate or panzerholz that i'm really missing something.

As is, for whatever the reasons, i have great resolution and great sound. I have amazing timbrel realism and great resolution too. I dont know if i have ever heard a better system, anywhere? I know how arrogant that probably sounds and some will say that i havent heard enough systems or amps and maybe you think its amazing til you've heard better! But i've been to hifi shops in my city and i've heard my audiophiles friends systems back when we had a hifi club and anyways i think it might be the best i've heard. I need to maybe get to a rocky mountainfest or something.

Oh yeah, and i've heard a dartzheel[spelt wrong], emm labs, evolution acoustics, rockport with dynavector one system and i prefer my sound to that too.

Not that my system is as powerful or the transient speed has no ceiling , rather i think it is that i am using a well designed single ended TUBE system with unique components with a stripped down simple approach that yields...A very high purity of ...TONE. Its so rich and so transparent at the same time. Beautiful but very linear. And it's got guts too.[enough]

This is ONE of my two highest audiophile values. Nothing is higher than these.

1. Is tone[or timbres] and 2. Is dynamics.

[sorry i got off on a tangent there...]

So, what i was getting at with the slate or wood thing comment is...that my choice to stay with wood probably robs me of some ultimate ...'quietness' and therefore some resolution. MAYBE. As the one owner mentioned the differences were negligible. Mostly likely its true but maybe an argument could be made that i retained more of the musicality because i stayed with wood and didn't go to slate. More Warmer than cooler? So i have a more pleasant sound but less toward the cerebral side of "neutral?"

Also, when i say i lose some resolution we are talking about extremely fine differences and also we are not taking into account what the myriad of other "pieces" in the system are contributing to the sound so its difficult to compare his results with mine. Maybe its more of a "flavour" difference rather than a resolution topic.

In a nutshell i need to find a plinth material or materials that will beat the current synergy i am getting, with what i already have. This is a very greedy endeavor because i already got it so good but i would be willing to look and try simply for the "sport" of it. My front end seems "tuned" nicely and at this level i feel like its just connoisseurship. That rubber sheet sounds great there![for whatever reason and in my context]

About the rubber sheet. Actually i built the recipe from a 7 page recipe of jean nantais's off audiogon. Maybe jean has abandoned its use through experimentation these days in the context of his system. If so does that mean it unequivocally should not be used?

Lewm, i'm at the point where I trust what i [capital i] think about my approach to the question of how to make sonic headway. It has become a solitary one. What i mean is, i have to find things out for myself and stop believing other peoples theories and comments about how they think a piece sounds or how things will sound if i use it like this or like that or with this or with that. Ultimately, I have to find my own way.

I feel i make quicker progress that way and i have more peace of mind.

If nobody uses rubber in that spot its ok. Albert is albert, jean is jean and i'm me. My system is unique to everyone else's. [plus i doubt that anybody really knows what everyone is or isnt using].

****The rubber actually decouples the chassis from the plinth, which is just what you don't want.*****

Yes and no.

But also...

How thick or thin a rubber are you talking about?
How dense is rubber being utilized?
How tightly is it sandwiched?
What is the associated equipement?
Is the metal chassis dampened with uk plasticine or not?
How does plasticine effect how much left over vibrations the rubber must pass to the wood , if any?
Is the platter damped with uk plastercine or not?
Which type of record mat will you be using?
What will the plinth be sitting on?
What kind of feet?
What arm and cart are you planning on using?
What type of armboard?
All these contributing factors create a final single "vibrating window" range for the record, cart to operate in so making blanket statements i think is difficult.

Strictly speaking the rubber does in fact couple the metal chassis to the wood. The question becomes to what degree and does the degree to which it couples it compliment "the rest of what's going on directly around it or not?"

I say it couples it because it does in fact pass some energy to the plinth even if it might be small. Its in "degrees" that it couples it to the plinth. [again..."tuning"]

I guess you would say its a poor conductor.... and that if it came in direct contact with the wood of the plint it ...would "for sure" make my system sound better! [ie, its a bad idea]

It would be an interesting experiment. I think the record receives very little noise arriving from the motor already because plasticine is all over the place and it has a high dampening factor [amongst other design factors] so i dont know how much switching to a wood shim will bring to the sonic table in terms of more quiet in that area. [in the final analysis though, to be honest, i really have no idea to what degree this is true]

If we suppose for a moment, for the sake of discussion, that the rubber is in fact providing too much "tuning" in the wrong direction ie more decoupled then coupled, then it could be argued that this is a good thing for my breuer arm and allaerts cart because less noise can travel up into the arm via the plinth because the motor is BETTER isolated from the wood plinth [where the breuer rests]!

Maybe just for the fun of it i will try and change no other parameter except the shim and see if the noise floor drops significantly!!!!!

You know what would be fun? If a pair of glasses existed that if you wore them the only thing that becomes visible is "energy moving through one material to the next and where it is "trapped"!" The first thing i would look at is the table as it is working. [smile]

I will consider your suggestion and when time permits maybe experiment with that. But i dont know if it is that simple and that black and white. Maybe it is...but i dont think so.

Thanks....

vertigo

Dear Vertigo,
From your description of the Lenco:
"A rubber mat is also sandwiched between the plinth and the metal top plate and cold coupled with four 5 inch screws. Wood is warmer than slate but i probably lose some resolution and timbrel realism as a trade off, the differences might be negligible."

The rubber mat is a very bad idea. Get rid of it, and you may also recover the "resolution and timbrel realism" that you suspect is missing. Trust me. Or if you don't trust me, take a look around you. No one is using any sort of rubber gasket between chassis and plinth these days. If you read up on Garrard plinths, the first directive is to ditch the rubber gasket. Albert Porter and Jean Nantais do not use such a gasket, either. The rubber actually decouples the chassis from the plinth, which is just what you don't want.

lewm

Owner
[smiling] ...I'm glad that made sense to someone else out there! I was a bit nervous as i started typing [ in my amp description ] and commenting about this thing that at face value you wouldn't think you could quantify or qualify or develop a palette for assessing its virtues or vices.

Its a reason, i would guess alot of people have chosen a component for... even though they could not articulate specifically that it was for ...the "quality of that quality".

Here are some different types of "air" i have heard from different system configurations.

A) Thick, heavy, honeyed, homogonized, dark
b) Grating, cold, hashy,hard, dead
c) Synthetic, plasticized, "cartoonlike", gentle but dead or "not moving"

If i were to try and describe the air i hear these days in my system i would say it is:

Clear, delicate, textured, palpable, "fresh", balanced sense of spaciousness, "moving", alive!

[ its like i can hear/even see in my minds eye, the particles vibrating as they're excited by the objects that are creating the resonances ]

Resonances...aren't they like a pebble tossed into a glass calm lake? the rings move outward and decay, they dont just stop after the 'note' has 'struck' do they?

Well, it is that quality i hear, portrayed to a high degree and of which i am laboring to articulate.

Interestingly, how quickly a resonances decay can travel will depend on the portrayal of the "viscosity" of the air. Its degree of thickness or thinness. I think also, how many objects it "bumps" into [or doesn't] and the properties pertaining to that object, will also effect the decaying of the note.[this too a system has the tough task of imitating accurately]

I think we all have a lot of experience with this in our everyday life so we intuitively have a good idea when the air is "believable" or not believable. We should use this as our standard for how well our systems are producing the "air in a room"?

I have heard "A, B and C" and i think my current set up does a fine job of mimicking real life 'air'. It contains a lot of the components that make it very believable and it does it with subtlety and without drawing attention to itself to a very high degree!

Maybe when we discuss a systems reproduction of the ambiance of the room where the recording was made we not only should include in the discussion , how faithfully does it reproduce the timbre of the musical instruments but also how well does it produce the "TIMBRE of the room"? [maybe they already do but i just overlooked it]

TIMBRE:

1.Acoustics, Phonetics . the characteristic quality of a sound, independent of pitch and loudness, from which its source or manner of production can be inferred. Timbre depends on the relative strengths of the components of different frequencies, which are determined by resonance.
2.
Music . the characteristic quality of sound produced by a particular instrument or voice; tone color.

This will depend on the kind and quality of the mikes used but a good recording, even if it is made in a studio, I think, should include the "air" as it is excited by the vibrations created by the instrument.

If "voice" can be considered an instrument then in a broad sense i think so can the "room/air/resonance" relationship too?

[smiling] Anyways, its an interesting thing to think about.

Devilboy....****Those reading this who never experienced that may think we're nuts. ****

[smiling]

Yes, but only because they have not reflected on the subject. I think you are astute to note this. I think its a great tool for measuring how the system is progressing or not as it is one of many vital components to HIFIDELITY.

[by the way...i think that word needs to be reclaimed!]

HI FIDELITY.

[just some thoughts]

Have a nice day.

vertigo

Yes, Vertigo, I especially agree with what you said about hearing the "air" in a room or hall when no one is playing. I hear live classical quite frequently and can attest to that feeling. Hearing that "silence" after the orchestra finishes playing and (for myself), hearing a system that can capture that ambiance in the room is truly breathtaking. Those reading this who never experienced that may think we're nuts.

devilboy

Owner
Thanks, devilboy...

Yeah, i'm still working on it...

I still have to add MORE... to complete what i perceive are the "components" of my system and the part they play.

More pics to come...it may be slow, fast or intermittent but i would like to post some "good" pics.

I like what robert harley said in his book, a perfect solid state amp and a perfect tube amp sound exactly the same...because...they are both perfect![smile] I like that and believe that.

In my head i know that it is ultimately in the execution of the design not whether or not it is tube or solid state, but with that said, i would recommend to any newbie to hifi to have at least one component in their system that has at least 1 well executed tube design in it. [You can lose to much to their distortion, it all depends ].

Tubes [this is going to be a bit of a blanket statement] have an inherent holographic organic quality to them that remove the "flatfield" negative feeling of solid state. Solid states , or the ones i have experienced [which honestly, is not alot][maybe to my good fortune[smile]] cannot produce to the degree, of the best tube designs, that sense of 'air' and in the room "tactileness" and palpable presence that tubes can. I stole this advice [have at least one tube in the system... somewhere]from robert harley's book and i'm glad! My experience has been that he it is true and that he is right.

A well executed crossoverless design in theory makes sense but let your ears tell you if their sound is a success. Hopefully the amp and the rest of the system works with that speaker and can let it work the way the designers intended it to.

I am biased toward tubes because of their visual glow but i am also attracted to them because of the SONIC "glow" they impart on the sound. They are VESSELS that can convey the SOUL of the music. [in the right circuit design, in the right system , otherwise they can fail to cast their spell.]

vertigo

Hmmmm....most interesting system I've read about in a while. Nice write up. More pics would be cool. I've sold most of my old system and am awaiting arrival of a crossoverless speaker. Also, going back to tubes......finally.

devilboy

Showing all 11 posts