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#1
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On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. This one will probably sound much better on our systems. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cseIRp9t5UE -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. BTW .. a true "audiophile" (which I am *not*) would be dismayed at the sight of a bass or treble control or any other circuit that "colors" the sound of the recording. I am not that far gone with this stuff. Living rooms and listening areas vary acoustically and really can't duplicate a concert hall or your local live music hot spot. I've played with audio stuff for years but have pretty much lost interest in it. I am cleaning out our house and you wouldn't believe the gear I am tossing. Came across a big box *full* of directional audio connects that must have cost a fortune to accumulate over the years. Problem is, I never bought into the "directional" BS to begin with. The idea is that the capacitive reactance changes along it's length and the directional cables compensate for any losses. My problem with that is that at audio frequencies there is *no* capacitive or inductive reactance generated anyway. At higher freqs .. like RF ... yes, the transmission line becomes reactive to frequency but not at audio freqs. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:28:52 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. BTW .. a true "audiophile" (which I am *not*) would be dismayed at the sight of a bass or treble control or any other circuit that "colors" the sound of the recording. I am not that far gone with this stuff. Living rooms and listening areas vary acoustically and really can't duplicate a concert hall or your local live music hot spot. I've played with audio stuff for years but have pretty much lost interest in it. I am cleaning out our house and you wouldn't believe the gear I am tossing. Came across a big box *full* of directional audio connects that must have cost a fortune to accumulate over the years. Problem is, I never bought into the "directional" BS to begin with. The idea is that the capacitive reactance changes along it's length and the directional cables compensate for any losses. My problem with that is that at audio frequencies there is *no* capacitive or inductive reactance generated anyway. At higher freqs .. like RF ... yes, the transmission line becomes reactive to frequency but not at audio freqs. I'm in the market for a new computer sound system. The one I've got now doesn't do justice to the 'normal' Telarc. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On 2/17/16 6:03 PM, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:28:52 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. BTW .. a true "audiophile" (which I am *not*) would be dismayed at the sight of a bass or treble control or any other circuit that "colors" the sound of the recording. I am not that far gone with this stuff. Living rooms and listening areas vary acoustically and really can't duplicate a concert hall or your local live music hot spot. I've played with audio stuff for years but have pretty much lost interest in it. I am cleaning out our house and you wouldn't believe the gear I am tossing. Came across a big box *full* of directional audio connects that must have cost a fortune to accumulate over the years. Problem is, I never bought into the "directional" BS to begin with. The idea is that the capacitive reactance changes along it's length and the directional cables compensate for any losses. My problem with that is that at audio frequencies there is *no* capacitive or inductive reactance generated anyway. At higher freqs .. like RF ... yes, the transmission line becomes reactive to frequency but not at audio freqs. I'm in the market for a new computer sound system. The one I've got now doesn't do justice to the 'normal' Telarc. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! I have some "M-Audio" speakers hooked up to my imac. Like these: http://www.amazon.com/M-Audio-Studio.../dp/B000MUXJCO They sound pretty good. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 18:28:53 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/17/16 6:03 PM, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:28:52 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. BTW .. a true "audiophile" (which I am *not*) would be dismayed at the sight of a bass or treble control or any other circuit that "colors" the sound of the recording. I am not that far gone with this stuff. Living rooms and listening areas vary acoustically and really can't duplicate a concert hall or your local live music hot spot. I've played with audio stuff for years but have pretty much lost interest in it. I am cleaning out our house and you wouldn't believe the gear I am tossing. Came across a big box *full* of directional audio connects that must have cost a fortune to accumulate over the years. Problem is, I never bought into the "directional" BS to begin with. The idea is that the capacitive reactance changes along it's length and the directional cables compensate for any losses. My problem with that is that at audio frequencies there is *no* capacitive or inductive reactance generated anyway. At higher freqs .. like RF ... yes, the transmission line becomes reactive to frequency but not at audio freqs. I'm in the market for a new computer sound system. The one I've got now doesn't do justice to the 'normal' Telarc. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! I have some "M-Audio" speakers hooked up to my imac. Like these: http://www.amazon.com/M-Audio-Studio.../dp/B000MUXJCO They sound pretty good. Thanks, I'll look into them. Do they get enough bass without a subwoofer? -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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John H. wrote:
On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 18:28:53 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 6:03 PM, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:28:52 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. BTW .. a true "audiophile" (which I am *not*) would be dismayed at the sight of a bass or treble control or any other circuit that "colors" the sound of the recording. I am not that far gone with this stuff. Living rooms and listening areas vary acoustically and really can't duplicate a concert hall or your local live music hot spot. I've played with audio stuff for years but have pretty much lost interest in it. I am cleaning out our house and you wouldn't believe the gear I am tossing. Came across a big box *full* of directional audio connects that must have cost a fortune to accumulate over the years. Problem is, I never bought into the "directional" BS to begin with. The idea is that the capacitive reactance changes along it's length and the directional cables compensate for any losses. My problem with that is that at audio frequencies there is *no* capacitive or inductive reactance generated anyway. At higher freqs .. like RF ... yes, the transmission line becomes reactive to frequency but not at audio freqs. I'm in the market for a new computer sound system. The one I've got now doesn't do justice to the 'normal' Telarc. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! I have some "M-Audio" speakers hooked up to my imac. Like these: http://www.amazon.com/M-Audio-Studio.../dp/B000MUXJCO They sound pretty good. Thanks, I'll look into them. Do they get enough bass without a subwoofer? -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! It's subjective. I think they do. Your mileage will vary. If you order from anazon returns are easy -- Sent from my iPhone 6+ |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 18:28:53 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/17/16 6:03 PM, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:28:52 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. BTW .. a true "audiophile" (which I am *not*) would be dismayed at the sight of a bass or treble control or any other circuit that "colors" the sound of the recording. I am not that far gone with this stuff. Living rooms and listening areas vary acoustically and really can't duplicate a concert hall or your local live music hot spot. I've played with audio stuff for years but have pretty much lost interest in it. I am cleaning out our house and you wouldn't believe the gear I am tossing. Came across a big box *full* of directional audio connects that must have cost a fortune to accumulate over the years. Problem is, I never bought into the "directional" BS to begin with. The idea is that the capacitive reactance changes along it's length and the directional cables compensate for any losses. My problem with that is that at audio frequencies there is *no* capacitive or inductive reactance generated anyway. At higher freqs .. like RF ... yes, the transmission line becomes reactive to frequency but not at audio freqs. I'm in the market for a new computer sound system. The one I've got now doesn't do justice to the 'normal' Telarc. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! I have some "M-Audio" speakers hooked up to my imac. Like these: http://www.amazon.com/M-Audio-Studio.../dp/B000MUXJCO They sound pretty good. Funny, if you scroll down to see the current version, they're cheaper than the previous version you have. I wonder what the differences are. The reviews for both seem pretty good. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, and narcissists...not guns! |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wednesday, February 17, 2016 at 8:05:35 PM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 18:28:53 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 6:03 PM, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:28:52 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 18:03:03 -0500, John H.
wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 17:28:52 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On Wed, 17 Feb 2016 14:38:31 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/17/16 12:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/17/2016 12:11 PM, John H. wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDxGQ5t4lvI Enjoy. Telarc has put out a number of Super Audio CD's, this being one of them. Hopefully, you have a Super Audio CD player (Sony) and amplifier/receiver that will accept it's 6 channel output with each channel having a dedicated, discrete input. The amp/receiver must be then put in direct, 6 channel mode, (often called "Multi-Channel Input" driving a main left, main right, center, left rear, right rear and subwoofer. Most Telarc SACD are hybrid, meaning they will also play on a conventional CD player but you will lose superior fidelity of a SACD recording. Conventional, digital "Surround Sound" ... be it 5.1 or 7.1 is *not* SACD. In addition, SACD's are recorded completely differently than a regular CD. It's complicated and hard to explain but it uses phase modulation rather than amplitude modulation. Basically, it's much like the fidelity difference between AM and FM radio. Many people don't realize that AM radio's bandwidth is limited to 10Khz which means it can't broadcast the full audio frequency spectrum that the human ear can detect. FM, in addition to being frequency modulated rather than amplitude modulated has a 200Khz bandwidth. The only negative about SACD's is the limited number of them available and the fact that Sony is the only manufacturer of SACD players (last I knew). My criteria is how much do the "super" CDs sound like a live concert. The few I have heard on really good sound systems sound over-engineered to me, sort of like an AUDI car. They sure as hell don't sound like you are sitting in the expensive seats at a serious music concert. BTW .. a true "audiophile" (which I am *not*) would be dismayed at the sight of a bass or treble control or any other circuit that "colors" the sound of the recording. I am not that far gone with this stuff. Living rooms and listening areas vary acoustically and really can't duplicate a concert hall or your local live music hot spot. I've played with audio stuff for years but have pretty much lost interest in it. I am cleaning out our house and you wouldn't believe the gear I am tossing. Came across a big box *full* of directional audio connects that must have cost a fortune to accumulate over the years. Problem is, I never bought into the "directional" BS to begin with. The idea is that the capacitive reactance changes along it's length and the directional cables compensate for any losses. My problem with that is that at audio frequencies there is *no* capacitive or inductive reactance generated anyway. At higher freqs .. like RF ... yes, the transmission line becomes reactive to frequency but not at audio freqs. I'm in the market for a new computer sound system. The one I've got now doesn't do justice to the 'normal' Telarc. I bought my wife a Bose "computer" speaker set that is as good as the old sound systems we grew up with that had coffin sized speaker boxes. |
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