Most of the time, front presence is used with a surround system to add ambient effects which are extracted from the front L/R channels.
Yamaha’s system doesn’t work like that. The signal to the front presence speakers is a discrete signal mimicking the reflections, decay times, etc. that would be present in the acoustic space.
Yamaha actually went out and measured the acoustic parameters of a number of real performance venues, which are then duplicated via digital processing. In a 5.1 system the processed effects signal is rolled into the back speaker signal, as well as the main L/R speakers if no front presence speakers are used. If the presence speakers are used, they get a totally discrete signal. This is preferable, IMO because it keeps the main L/R/ “clean” without any processing.
I’m not familiar with how it works with 7.1 or more systems.).
Wayne. Thanks for the reply and info. So this sort of begs my original post. Why would one choose front presence over an all 5.1 front surround set up?
As I said in my first post:
They are not “front surround” speakers.
They are only for Yamaha’s DSP soundfield effects that model acoustic spaces.
They work in addition to, and on top of, 5.1 and 2-channel stereo.
As far as “why” to use the front speakers: They do a better job of replicating the soundfield effects than having the effects signal rolled into the front speakers. If that doesn’t interest you, then no reason to use them.
Regards,
Wayne A. Pflughaupt