Danem

Danem

Audioholic Intern
Now that I am losing the ability to hear music in the higher octaves I am wondering if there is such an arrangement/loudspeaker that is at the other end of the spectrum to a subwoofer; emphasising the high notes.

Thanks for any input. Cheers, Dan
 
tyhjaarpa

tyhjaarpa

Audioholic Field Marshall
Go try out different loudspeakers and you will find what you like.
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Sure I mean a tweeter, and only a tweeter. A driver that includes nothing but a tweeter.
Make your own supplemental tweeter is probably a better option than what, as far as I'm aware, doesn't exist.
 
Danem

Danem

Audioholic Intern
That should be just loads of fun. No problem building decent cabinets or in finding a pair of tweeters, but I haven't rolled a Butterworth for the past 50-odd years.
Cheers, Dan
 
Steve81

Steve81

Audioholics Five-0
You can always use EQ to add a modest (or not so modest) bump to the treble to achieve the balance you're looking for. As long as you're not blasting the volume, which would further degrade your hearing, it shouldn't be a big problem.
 
H

herbu

Audioholic Samurai
Now that I am losing the ability to hear music in the higher octaves I am wondering if there is such an arrangement/loudspeaker that is at the other end of the spectrum to a subwoofer; emphasising the high notes.

Thanks for any input. Cheers, Dan
Danem,
A number of us are in that boat... including me. Fortunately, the freq loss begins very high. Actually, higher than most instruments. While I don't know of any speakers intentionally focused on the highs, a couple things do come to mind.

First, speakers with high quality tweeters to give you the best and cleanest highs. Next, there are 2 ways to accentuate a range of frequencies: enhance that range, or decrease the other ranges. In that vein, have you tried using "Direct" with your music?

Your receiver likely adds some bass and mid brightening in Stereo or Surround modes. Direct bypasses this brightening, and the effect is a relatively louder treble... at least to my ears, and especially at lower volumes.

Finally, an equalizer is an option. It will let you adjust frequency bands to your liking.
 
highfigh

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
Be careful with excessive high frequency levels (or extremes at any frequency)- it speeds up the process of frequency-specific hearing loss.
 
mtrycrafts

mtrycrafts

Seriously, I have no life.
Now that I am losing the ability to hear music in the higher octaves I am wondering if there is such an arrangement/loudspeaker that is at the other end of the spectrum to a subwoofer; emphasising the high notes.

Thanks for any input. Cheers, Dan
If you cannot hear the upper octaves, why are you looking to boost the tweeter?
Try using the treble tone control in the receiver and boost it and see if that helps before you experiment.
If you want a stand alone tweeter to boost it to hearing ability, I surmise you are the sole listener?
 
j_garcia

j_garcia

Audioholic Jedi
There's a redundancy there. "Wife" and "Off" are the same thing.
 
Danem

Danem

Audioholic Intern
Thanks to all who joined in. I see that there are references to EQ. I assume that means Equaliser, and another assumption is that that is the modern equivalent to the Compressor/Expanders that I used to build in the 1960's.
Having switched from electronics to photojournalism about 50 years ago, I am way behind the times.
I guess that I will have to bite the bullet, buy one of the cheaper AVR's, and fumble my way forward.
My thanks to you, Dan.
 
lsiberian

lsiberian

Audioholic Overlord
Thanks to all who joined in. I see that there are references to EQ. I assume that means Equaliser, and another assumption is that that is the modern equivalent to the Compressor/Expanders that I used to build in the 1960's.
Having switched from electronics to photojournalism about 50 years ago, I am way behind the times.
I guess that I will have to bite the bullet, buy one of the cheaper AVR's, and fumble my way forward.
My thanks to you, Dan.
These days we use a DSP to do EQ. The miniDSP is the most versatile board I know of for sell that can do as you wish. Just know that visitors may not appreciate overly emphasized highs.
 
M

Mark of Cenla

Full Audioholic
On one has mentioned the old Radio Shack add-on super tweeter. Peace and goodwill.
 
M

markw

Audioholic Overlord
On one has mentioned the old Radio Shack add-on super tweeter. Peace and goodwill.
These are good but they extend the top end response of a system, not add volume to what's already being reproduced.

Along those lines, when talking equalizers, keep in mind that tweeters aren't really made to play loud. If you feed them too power by applying too much boost, they may quietly go silent.
 

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