ruadmaa said:
How do you know your speakers are playing the signal flat?
If I take your statement literally, I know for a fact that my speakers do
not play the signal flat. My speakers are in the same boat as 99% of all other speakers in that they play within ±3dB of an flat signal sweep (at 1m). I suspect what you meant though was
'how do you know you are hearing a flat response?' and if that is the case then the answer is simple; I measure the response heard at the listening position from a full range frequency sweep fed through my speakers.
I'm not saying that I have a perfectly flat response. What I'm saying is that I personally won't use such coarse adjustment as tone controls.
lurker10 said:
I am so glad to see someone ask the "forbidden" question about why tone controls disappeared on high end preamps. It makes absolutely no sense, except for the audiophlake marketing that tone controls degrade the sound.
Makes no sense? If you were the sort to buy a so called 'high-end preamp', then it's not too far a stretch of the imagination to conclude that significant room treatment would be put in place to extract the most from the amp. After all, it
is 'high-end'.
Perhaps after listening to such a system you would begin to appreciate that tone controls are not so important after all.
lurker10 said:
...we all have lots of CDs, LPs, whatever, from different eras and genre's, all of which were mixed by different engineers, miked by different people, etc. The way it sounded in the mixing room on their monitors does not mean that we will hear it "the way it was intended" on our vastly different systems. We all tweak our systems to our taste, and getting the wide range of mixes to sound good to us in our rooms is not possible.
How far have you gone to proving true your last statement?
lurker10 said:
I have a pretty tasty system for two channel that would be on the audiophlake approved list, but I like tone controls. Not all the time, but when you need them, you need them. I guess I'll get a visit from the audiophlake police to confiscate my preamp!
Nobody here has said they shouldn't be used. It's all down to personal preference. If an amp doesn't have tone controls and you want them, don't buy it. Simple.
highfihoney said:
...i understand(in principal)how come tone/loudness controls are considered by many to alter the signal to where it is not what the recording engineer had in mind but it just dont seem pratical.
Highfihoney (and others), before I start getting blasted for supposedly condemming tone controls, please remember what I wrote previously:
I've nothing against people using tone controls. They can suit themselves as far as I'm concerned.
highfihoney said:
if infact non tone control preamps send a truly unaltered signal to the amplifiers with no coloration of their own then it would stand to reason that all non tone control preamps should sound exactly the same which i have found out is not the case at all.
Oh no no no. The above leads to (the dark side?
) the 'all amps sound the same' argument which I for one am not (at this time) getting involved in.
highfihoney said:
i compared 3 different non tone control preamps from pass labs,mcintosh & audio research in my 2 channel rig & all 3 of the preamps sounded way different in every way,how can 3 seperate preamps sound totally different if they are not altering the signal and are just presenting the recording exactly as the engineer intended?
Pass.
I am not interested in whether or not my amp sounds better or worse than that amp. I am interested in what I hear at the listening position in my room, which is the sum total of the contribution from my CD player, interconnects, amp, speaker cables, speakers and of course the room itself.
Each person may attribute percentages as they see fit.