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Mr. Luddite Mr. Luddite is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2013
Posts: 6,972
Default Technology Updates

On 1/13/2014 12:16 PM, wrote:
On Monday, January 13, 2014 1:04:50 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/13/2014 12:27 AM,
wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jan 2014 12:26:58 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote:




On 1/12/14, 11:51 AM,
wrote:

On Sun, 12 Jan 2014 11:25:52 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote:




That's cool...are those M-Audio speakers? They look very much like mine.




I bought my wife a set of Bose speakers that are the size of a Spam


can and sound like a boom box.




http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41aYSHGKCwL.jpg



A typical Bose sound.


The only problem is you can hear the flaws in low bit rate rips ;-)






I know they are very popular and highly rated, but I've never been fond


of the sound that emanates from the Bose speakers I've heard. I don't


know why that is. My "main" stereo speakers are electrostatics, about


six feet tall, and I like they way they sound. I've got a pair of


M-Audio speakers on my computer desk, and they're adequate for that


purpose.




Like I said, the Bose sound. It seems to be aimed at people who have


very good hearing in the higher ranges. The sound is very crisp. I


worked on line printers long enough that my hearing has a bit of a


notch in that area.


I like that good old 70s deep sound you got from ARs or Sansui with


cabinets that could hold a small child.








Over the years Bose has earned a (often deserved) reputation for phony

sounding speaker systems but that was not always the case. Way back

when the original 901 speakers were introduced, they were met with very

positive reviews by audiophiles of the time. Also, the Bose sound

reinforcement designs in small sound system packages have been copied

and emulated by many other small speaker and/or radio/CD/mp3 players

manufacturers over the years.



Back when "hi-fi" was the rage, there were two distinctive speaker

"sounds", the "West Coast" sound and the "East Coast" sound. The West

Coast sound emphasized the mid range and tended to be brighter sounding.

The East Coast sound was a more mellow sound with the mids somewhat

de-emphasized.



The original 901 and even the original 501 Bose speakers were pretty

good for their time. Obviously technology has advanced and, to me, the

most natural sounding speakers today are ribbon types and some

electrostatics.


Wasn't it the 901s that had a special sound processor box that hooked up between the pre-amp and amp? Basically an equalizer that shaped the audio to compensate for the speaker's lack of a flat frequency response.

I always thought they sounded impressive... for a while. Then listener's fatigue set in, and I didn't like them anymore.

I've been running a set of NHT's for a few years now. Great sound, very accurate.



The 901s required an equalizer as did some of their PA and sound
reinforcement speaker systems.

A friend of mine is heavily involved with his church and was given the
responsibility of upgrading their sound system.

He is also a regular customer at the guitar shop and performance venue I
built and equipped and he asked me to recommend a new system. I visited
the church to scope out it's size and noticed the PAs they were using.
The church is not very large, so a big system was not required. They
were using a pair of older Bose PA speakers .... I've forgotten what
model number and they sounded terrible. They are supposed to be used
with an equalizer (like the 901s) but it didn't exist. The speakers
had been donated minus the equalizer and no one knew they needed it.
We checked eBay, found one and bought it cheap. When it arrived we
hooked it up and he was blown away at how much better they sounded.
Saved them quite a bit of $$.