neo,
thats on the agenda but i will try with not just any amp and not at the moment.
first on the cards is the cardas spade installation and then the duelund RC network coming up next month.
One step at a time.
BTW, when are you coming over ?
mpw
As Arj mentioned, it is as debatable as the tube vs ss amps but the conventional audiophile wisdom says that the sealed box would give more accurate and refined bass vis a vis a ported one albeit at the cost of beginning to roll off at higher hz.one questions if the ported bass is the true one or is the sealed box one ?
AFAIK, port noise sounds like "wooff wooff" and not "thump thump"what i was hearing before was bass or port noise ?
I'm sure you know the answer already but answering it nevertheless. There could be other considerations as well but mainly it would be for producing lower bass for a given driver size and price point.why are most speaker designs ported ? i can count maybe ATC, merlin TSM and ???? among the sealed designs.
I'm not sure if the answer would be as straight forward as the question.would the character of the bass change if the merlins are fed on a more powerful and equally refined amp ??
one striking thing about a sealed speaker is the bass - after having spent some time with the merlins and doing a mental comparo with all earlier speakers i auditioned / owned.. one thing thats missing is the additional zing to the bass ( call it thump )...
one can feel the absence of a port or in otherwords one questions if the ported bass is the true one or is the sealed box one ?
...
thanks hydra and capt..
i plan to get some folks over home for a small listening session and that should be a fun experience.
hydra - i agree about the bass but what i was trying to communicate was that - having been used to ported bass for so long.. its takes a while to get used to this... thats all..
I want to do 2 things ( for kicks.. )
a. hear the merling with a high quality tube amp
b. hear the merlins with a high quality SS amp
and i want to do both the above in my home.
This is a really long shot so i dont know whan this will work out but i am happy with the Naim CD5XS and Nait 5i for the moment. The Naim Nait does drive the Merlins quite well at about 10 o clock which is quite sufficient for me.
Looking forward to the weekend and its only thursday !!
mpw
Hi MPW,
here is 1 rand worth of contribution..
my limited experiments in speaker design tell me you design a speaker bass response for a target room and also for placement in the room. this is because boundary gain impacts bass response (floor placement, wall placement, corner placement). and room gain gives a helping hand too. So you'd best ask the designer which is the ideal room for your speaker and work from there on (if that's an option) - from the looks of your speaker size and the driver it uses a 120sq ft (1000 cu. ft) looks good.
Sealed speaker bass roll off below tuning is more gentle & benign than a bass reflex. therefore it often works vicariously with room gain to give an almost flat response. (again placement is the key). and that is also the reason that many bass reflex speakers are found to be "boomy" - room gain + flat response = excess bass.
Placement makes a big difference to bass response. you may remember your visit to my house, where we hear speakers 18" from the wall and then about 4 ft from the wall. just FYi - that I had cut the bass by -15dB in the 30hz range to keep the response flat while in the near wall position. for your room (as I remember it) - I'd move the left speaker closer to the left wall and the possibly sit a bit further back (you may be sitting in a null) and see how that works
finally, it's all about getting used to it. flat response always sounds a bit lean at first. and the absence of distortion also makes the bass sound leaner. let the sound imprint before contemplating any changes.
cheers
thanks nikhil... that was interesting reading.. but to complete the musical experience you do need the lower octaves.. doesnt matter about how much % of it is there or if its just a beat. Thats my view.
But my choice of speaker may not be dictated by what i hold / view.. hope folks appreciate that .. mainly as the listening environment plays a huge role ( in a way harks back to what Alan Shaw mentions but in a different sense ).
mpw
Basically there's not that much out there below 60Hz. If you played the low pass samples AS shared in the Harbeth forum you can take a call on whether it's worth spending your time and effort chasing that. Your room as well as the harmonics in the music will help fill out gaps - it's the way a good speaker works.