They were level matched with no Dirac applied (I did do it later).
They both had no EQ applied.
they both had the same speaker positions. Played with toe in both of them as toe in affects the arendals.
I think sadly in this game, people obsess a lot over measurements without listening.
I also cross compared with kef reference which measure extremely well but sounded inferior to the perlistens in many respects. If I’d just gone off measurements, they are both flat so should have sounded the same.
I get some people can’t afford to demo the speakers in their own home or go out to listen to them and cross compare but I think it’s important. Sitting at home watching graphs only gets you so far.
for example, I can measure flat to 16hz with some budget ish subwoofers but they do sound different to higher end subs measuring the same - due to th
I’m really not keen to spend on the subs in hindsight so I might not even listen to them. I’d be trading three m15s for 1 d215 or 2 d15s or 2 JTR rs1
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People are correct to pay attention to measurements. If a speaker measures poorly it will sound bad. The problem is the converse is not necessarily true. It can measure well on standard measurements and come up somewhat short. I think the reason for that is shortcomings in power band response. That is not easily measured without significant risk of blowing up speakers under test.
Getting to listen to speakers is now tough. There are few local dealers that have a significant variety of offerings and conditions for such are often not optimal.
Having speakers shipped and then parking them up is a real PITA I would imagine. I say imagine, as I have never bought a speaker. I design and build my own.
Yes, I do make sure they measure well, and of course I get to hear them pretty much on a daily basis.
I do look at power band responses differently to most commercial rivals I think.
Commercial subs as a whole are inefficient which is why you see these enormous powers, and people assume the other speakers are offloaded. WRONG!
The acoustic energy from 80 Hz to 1500 Hz is enormous, and actually pretty significant to 2.5K. The common mistake is to offer three ways crossover over to a totally inadequate mid range driver about 400 Hz give or take a little. That speakers can measure well on standard measurements, but in no way deliver the goods on a lot of musical sources.