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Matching up Advents for Stacking


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#21 Guest_tim t_*

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Posted 22 November 2009 - 06:23 AM

So it's been a few weeks now and i am still totally blown away by my stacked new large advents, i see no need to modify them in any way, the sound stage is huge, i listen to classical, jazz and what ever, the more i listen to them albeit quietly because i live in an apartment building, the more i love them, even with movies they are huge, no need to turn up the bass or have sub woofer, i'm still working in 2 demensions anyway stereo, perhaps it's just the pure direct feature and the twin mono amps of my yamaha rx596, who knows, but when i go to cd direct, i worry about getting evicted, i cannot fault them in any way, i really have my doubts that if i walked into a very high end audio store that i could find anything even close inless i was willing to put out a huge and i mean huge chunk of money, all i can say is that this set up is awsome and grows on me everytime i listen and you don't need to crank it up to get good listening volumes. cheers.

#22 dingus

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Posted 22 November 2009 - 04:30 PM

So it's been a few weeks now and i am still totally blown away by my stacked new large advents, i see no need to modify them in any way, the sound stage is huge, i listen to classical, jazz and what ever, the more i listen to them albeit quietly because i live in an apartment building, the more i love them, ....

gee, i wonder how Zilch is going to measure that on his graph?
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#23 Doug G.

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Posted 25 November 2009 - 04:38 PM

Even though I disagree with zilch re stacked Advents (I have four stacks in quad), I don't think we need to do this veiled denigration thing.

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#24 dingus

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Posted 25 November 2009 - 10:02 PM

it wasnt meant to be veiled, but the point is well taken. Zilch seems to ignore the enjoyment side of the equation, or at the very least he puts the spec's ahead of the sound. the point i want to make is that he's off base when he tries to hold everyone else to his standard.
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#25 Zilch

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Posted 27 November 2009 - 05:07 AM

it wasnt meant to be veiled, but the point is well taken. Zilch seems to ignore the enjoyment side of the equation, or at the very least he puts the spec's ahead of the sound. the point i want to make is that he's off base when he tries to hold everyone else to his standard.

I measure, I post; I hold no one but myself to my standard.

I also listen and enjoy, but know that has nothing to do with what the speaker IS. That's why you'll rarely find me saying anything subjective about how any speaker sounds -- I am no more reliable in this respect than anybody else. I like what I like, and you like what you like, none of which has any bearing on the facts.

FACT is, when studied under controlled conditions, central tendencies reveal themselves regarding listener preferences, and those are well correlated with objective measurements of loudspeaker performance. We each and all determine for ourselves whether that has any relevance to our individual experience.... ;)

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#26 dingus

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Posted 27 November 2009 - 03:52 PM

I measure, I post; I hold no one but myself to my standard.

I also listen and enjoy, but know that has nothing to do with what the speaker IS. That's why you'll rarely find me saying anything subjective about how any speaker sounds -- I am no more reliable in this respect than anybody else. I like what I like, and you like what you like, none of which has any bearing on the facts.

FACT is, when studied under controlled conditions, central tendencies reveal themselves regarding listener preferences, and those are well correlated with objective measurements of loudspeaker performance. We each and all determine for ourselves whether that has any relevance to our individual experience.... ;)

fact is, that myself and others believe stacked Advents are a worthwhile endeavor because they sound really good. fact is, you contend we are wasting our efforts because according to the measurements, stacking "doesnt work". thats a standard i wont be held to.

my opinion of a speaker is based on how it sounds to me, but your opinion based on data of "what the speaker is" is no less subjective. the reality is that the facts which determine the merits of a speaker are determined by ones own priorities. the data is less important to me because it cant tell me what i like or dont like, or how something sounds. i'll rely on my ears to be the ultimate and final authority for this. if you place what you hear at a lower priority to the data, you are missing the point.
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#27 Zilch

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Posted 29 November 2009 - 08:06 PM

i'll rely on my ears to be the ultimate and final authority for this. if you place what you hear at a lower priority to the data, you are missing the point.

No, you are missing the "well correlated" point. I listen, I hear. You're not talking about speakers, rather, about yourself.

It's a significant distinction.... ;)

http://www.zaphaudio...evaluation.html

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#28 dingus

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Posted 29 November 2009 - 10:21 PM

that guy is as big of a knucklehead as you are.

A speaker can't be evaluated like a painting. The nature of a painting forces subjectivity while a speaker *can* be objectively tested.

paintings are evaluated objectively, from style, color, shading, lighting, individual brush strokes, texture, grain, materials used etc. these aspects can be quantified and measured just as well as frequency response and driver performance are. you've both missed the point, and that is, once all the testing and measuring is done and one listens to the sound of the speaker, then the data stops. the endeavor moves from a technical exercise to an auditory experience. we dont hear the data or the spec, we hear the sound, and it absolutely is about the individual because we all interpret what we hear differently and form our individual opinions from that. your problem is that you try to treat this as a single event when it is two separate and distinct processes. i'm not knocking anyone for enjoying the technical aspects of audio, but i do take exception when i am told that my subjective interpretations of what i enjoy do not matter.

back to stacked Advents, despite the measurements and data, they still manage to sound and work very well for many and the data cant change that. just because it looks good on paper doesnt mean its going to sound good in practice and vice-versa.

No, you are missing the "well correlated" point. I listen, I hear. You're not talking about speakers, rather, about yourself.

It's a significant distinction.... :rolleyes:

http://www.zaphaudio...evaluation.html


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#29 Zilch

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Posted 30 November 2009 - 02:50 AM

your problem is that you try to treat this as a single event when it is two separate and distinct processes. i'm not knocking anyone for enjoying the technical aspects of audio, but i do take exception when i am told that my subjective interpretations of what i enjoy do not matter.


They matter, of course, but objectively speaking, only to you.

[OH, and the salesman, of course, albeit fleetingly.... :rolleyes: ]

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#30 dingus

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Posted 30 November 2009 - 05:06 AM

They matter, of course, but objectively speaking, only to you.

[OH, and the salesman, of course, albeit fleetingly.... :rolleyes: ]

would you agree that it matters to anyone who enjoys the sound of stacked Advents as well?
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#31 Zilch

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Posted 30 November 2009 - 08:51 AM

would you agree that it matters to anyone who enjoys the sound of stacked Advents as well?

Doubtless; there is no conflict here.... :rolleyes:

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#32 speaker dave

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Posted 01 December 2009 - 01:11 PM

When stacking Advents are the top units inverted to keep the tweeters fairly close together? If this is not done one would think that the rather distant spacing between the tweeters would cause some odd interference effects. With the top units inverted, the tweeters would form a short, vertical "line" over much of their operating ranges, which would help to reduce vertical radiation in the upper midrange and treble. No telling how the widely spaced woofers would intereact with each other, however.

Howard Ferstler


This is my problem with stacked Advents. If the tweeters are mounted together (top speaker inverted) then, yes, there are likely to be interference nulls unless the listener very carefully sits at just the right height (on the bisecting plane between the two speakers).

A lot of people stack Advents and like the result. For some, that is the end of the story, which is fine.

For those that are technically curious, here an experiment. Feed pink noise or FM interstation hiss into one of your Advent pairs. Have a friend slowly slide the upper system forwards and backwards a few inches (nearer to your listening position and farther from it). From your listening position you will hear a swishing sound as the treble range goes in and out of phase. This is classic comb filtering. If your ear level isn't exactly one "Advent" height above the floor the only way to achieve flat response is with the upper system slightly farther back than the lower system, to bring the two tweeters into phase. This assumes your ear level is more than half way up the stack.

Once you have heard this effect, I don't know why you wouldn't want to correct for it.

In effect, by stacking a pair of speakers you have designed a symetrical array, a popular layout for high end systems. The difference is that most designers, when creating such arrays, find ways to reduce tweeter lobing. Unit to unit spacing (versus wavelength) is a problem: the tweeters are too far apart. Most such systems cross over to a single central tweeter to prevent the problem.

Your stacked Advents, like all such arrays, are more directional. If you allign them correctly the direct sound level at the listeners ears goes up 6dB while the power into the room has gone up 3dB (for all but lowest frequencies). So by definition the directivty index has gone up 3dB (Q has doubled). This will give a more focussed soundfield, but with less spaciousness. Some will like that, others won't.

If you don't allign them carefully then you probably have some serious suckouts in the treble range. You may like that too, but acknowledge it as an abberation rather than an improvement.

There's no magic here.

David

#33 Zilch

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Posted 01 December 2009 - 10:02 PM

The situation is worsened, David, by the fact that the speakers are not mirror-imaged, and thus, when stacked, the tweeters are not only displaced vertically, but horizontally, as well.

When I measured a stacked pair, there was only one line in space (rather than a plane) equidistant from all drivers, and once I located that, I started from there as baseline. It fell apart immediately with movement from that axis in any direction.

With a pair of stacks, the two lines become a point at their intersection when properly toed in. I suppose one might optimally aim one stack at one ear, and the other at the other to get it "right...." :rolleyes:

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#34 speaker dave

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Posted 02 December 2009 - 08:18 PM

When I measured a stacked pair, there was only one line in space (rather than a plane) equidistant from all drivers, and once I located that, I started from there as baseline. It fell apart immediately with movement from that axis in any direction.

Clearly that's your problem: you've got to stop measuring things!! :rolleyes:

David

#35 kkantor

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Posted 02 December 2009 - 08:25 PM

I love the sound of stacked speakers, sometimes. It gives a them a sense of authority and richness, that might be part psychological, part radiation pattern, part changes in the tonality. Comfort food for the ears. Great for that heaping plate of spaghetti with lots of butter and garlic kind of mood.

I also know that stacked speakers are less "accurate" to the signal, according to some of the time-honored ways that accuracy has been defined in the field of audio. So, stacked speakers are not my go-to approach when my listening goal is to hear exactly what is on the record. But, both types of goal seem to me to be authentic, and we are lucky that we don't have to give up one for the other.

Now, there are legit arguments to be made about the benefits and weaknesses of both objectively based assessment (which certainly can be listening-centric itself), and purely subjective approaches. A lot of it, I think, comes down to the type of person doing the evaluation. Measurements or structured listening have very little value to most hobbyists. But, they are essential to designers and pro reviewers.

-k

#36 Zilch

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Posted 02 December 2009 - 08:35 PM

Clearly that's your problem: you've got to stop measuring things!! :rolleyes:

YOU, sir, are in large part to blame for this "affliction...." ;)

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#37 dingus

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Posted 03 December 2009 - 01:46 AM

...A lot of it, I think, comes down to the type of person doing the evaluation. Measurements or structured listening have very little value to most hobbyists. But, they are essential to designers and pro reviewers.

thank you sir for summing up this point so succinctly.
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#38 speaker dave

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Posted 03 December 2009 - 03:24 PM

Now, there are legit arguments to be made about the benefits and weaknesses of both objectively based assessment (which certainly can be listening-centric itself), and purely subjective approaches. A lot of it, I think, comes down to the type of person doing the evaluation. Measurements or structured listening have very little value to most hobbyists. But, they are essential to designers and pro reviewers.

-k

I've always felt that measuring without listening, as well as listening without measuring, are both fighting with one arm tied behind. Don't we measure speakers to see all their abberations and then listen to rank order these faults and see which are above a threshold of perception?

The approach I've been happy with in design, and I suspect your approach is similar, is to rely heavily on measurements early on, while roughing out a crossover, until the driver passbands are about right and the various sections are adding well, then to switch to listening for the fine balancing of a dB here and a dB there.

Its not the only approach (equal parts measuring and listening) but it is the fastest, and I think the surest. I always thought it would be interesting to design a system purely by listening, not a single measurement. I think I could do it, but I wonder if I wouldn't get stuck in a blind alley. You know, converging on some euphonic curve with every trouble area pulled down to hide it. Plus what about all the early stages where drivers sections aren't adding, poor phase blend, etc. How long would it take to stumble across a crossover point, crossover order and phasing that worked? (Those that don't design systems for a living may not appreciate these details but they are a major part of the process.)

I am frequently bemused (annoyed) to see a Stereophile review where some new company has designed a seriously flawed system because they have no technical background or ability or interest in measurements. You know, the woofer to tweeter crossover that sucks out 20dB because having the woofer and tweeter the same polarity "is the right way to go". (And what about all of these turntables that cost $10s of thousands with no specs for wow flutter or rumble because "traditional specs don't matter" Don't get me started!!)

I guess the real question is, when we know something measures badly, do we toss it out without listening and move on to something that is objectively better? Have we passed up some great sounding combination by assuming that bad measurements correlate with bad sound? Perhaps, but my experience (and prejudices) tell me, no.

Just my $.02

David

#39 dingus

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Posted 03 December 2009 - 06:47 PM

I've always felt that measuring without listening, as well as listening without measuring, are both fighting with one arm tied behind. Don't we measure speakers to see all their abberations and then listen to rank order these faults and see which are above a threshold of perception?.......

......I guess the real question is, when we know something measures badly, do we toss it out without listening and move on to something that is objectively better? Have we passed up some great sounding combination by assuming that bad measurements correlate with bad sound? Perhaps, but my experience (and prejudices) tell me, no.

Just my $.02

David

thats the beauty of being in my position, i dont have to worry about measuring, the work has already been done for me. in my view, measurements and specifications are essential towards meeting any design goal, but need to be verified by listening.

"If it measures good and sounds bad, -- it is bad. If it sounds good and measures bad, -- you've measured the wrong thing." - Daniel von Recklinghausen


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#40 Zilch

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Posted 03 December 2009 - 07:44 PM

Now, there are legit arguments to be made about the benefits and weaknesses of both objectively based assessment (which certainly can be listening-centric itself), and purely subjective approaches. A lot of it, I think, comes down to the type of person doing the evaluation. Measurements or structured listening have very little value to most hobbyists. But, they are essential to designers and pro reviewers.

That depends upon the nature of the hobby. If it's DIY, which comprises an increasing majority of audio hobbyists, measurement capabilities are an essential tool. That doesn't only mean building stuff; as systems become more sophisticated, it also plays a significant role in in-room optimization. It doesn't require a huge stretch to appreciate the potential benefits of applying the same principles and technologies to simpler installations, as well, and with the widespread availability of inexpensive measurement tools, interest in how it all works and behaves in our own spaces is expanding exponentially:

http://www.classicsp...?showtopic=5736

I always thought it would be interesting to design a system purely by listening, not a single measurement. I think I could do it, but I wonder if I wouldn't get stuck in a blind alley. You know, converging on some euphonic curve with every trouble area pulled down to hide it. Plus what about all the early stages where drivers sections aren't adding, poor phase blend, etc. How long would it take to stumble across a crossover point, crossover order and phasing that worked? (Those that don't design systems for a living may not appreciate these details but they are a major part of the process.)

I have what I consider to be an excellent article on this subject saved in one or another of the computers around here; the answer is that, even in the hands of a capable designer, the result will conform to their specific tastes and preferences only, which, as we all know, are subject to change as soon as the next time they listen. A competent head-banger will build something very different than a classicist will. With measurements and knowledge of the differences, as you suggest, it's far easier to build either or both, as desired, and mighty good ones, as well.

Bottom line of this thread for me is that Tim's experience with stacking Advents was seen as an opportunity to dump on objectivism in general, and the Zichster, in particular. Fact is, it does not invalidate the principle, as stated, in any respect....

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