Bold highlights in quote below, are mine...
There was a comment from Viki that the same speakers (Phillips) sound much better with a more powerful/balanced amp. I think the difficulty in separating speaker and amp behavior has lead to this this mixed response.
Are there any general guidelines for auditions so that we can understand speaker versus amp behavior? Is it possible to distinguish them as opposed to just being able to say whether an amp+spk combo sounds neutral/warm/sharp?
Hi Askii2,
If I correctly understand what you are trying to say, my opinion is:
-
Difficulty in separating behaviour has not led to mixed response
(and it shouldn't either... you shouldn't "think" that a combo is sounding warm, because you "know" that the associated gear is known to sound warm. You should directly "feel" how it sounds, without caring what is causing it)
I believe there is mixed response, because our observations are always in reference to our past sonic-experience. So guy who was raised listneing to a old tube based radio (circa 1960's) will find Wharfedale 9.2 to be very sharp!
What this demo may prove that the observers come from diverse past sonic-experiences!
- Yes. There can be general
guidelines based on "general" opinion published in media or personal discussions. For e.g to my knowledge NAD amps are considered "warm", whereas Rotel amps are considered "Forward /Sharp". Similar guidelines are floating around for speakers. Now, you can use this info anyway you want. You may use it to "predict" how certain gear may sound if paired together...
or... as you have queried...
you can use this info to distinguish /breakdown the overall tonality into parts, for e.g saying that the extra sizzle in cymbals is coming from Rotel amp, whereas the extra low-bass is coming from the 7" woofer of Ushers, making the overall tonality sound "Neutral".
Regds,
Sonosphere