
isolar8001
Audioholic Field Marshall
Funny...I've had Dirac on my Pioneer for a while and never felt the need to use it.
Pay for Dirac on a Denon ? Maybe if it was 50 bucks.
Pay for Dirac on a Denon ? Maybe if it was 50 bucks.
Clear and natural speech is probably the most important and significant test of any speaker system. If speakers can't reproduce clear natural speech without Audyssey or Dirac, and boosting the center channel then there are problems.Thanks for all the tips and perspectives folks, it helps a lot. Just as an update I finally hooked up the Denon 3800 and run a first quick Dirac calibration (with Bass control). Result is really good, at least compared to my previous Onkyo 1700 with just regular Dirac. I do have one issue in dialog is not kinda low, but otherwise I'm definitely getting a very immersive, clear and enveloping 3D surround effect, especially when engaging Auro 3D.
It could probably sound a lot better if I got proper speakers, subwoofers and ceiling Atmos speakers, but for what I have and the limitations of my room, I'm very happy with the results. I'll keep playing with Dirac to see if I can get better results.
Completely agree. But to be fair this was just a very rough and quick Dirac calibration. I’ll see if I can improve it further. The cs9080 center channel is a proven beast so I know it’s not the speaker but rather the calibration.Clear and natural speech is probably the most important and significant test of any speaker system. If speakers can't reproduce clear natural speech without Audyssey or Dirac, and boosting the center channel then there are problems.
That is a test any speaker I audition must pass with flying colors. I find that actually most speakers come up short.
Most of us have limits with our rooms and we have to compromiseThanks for all the tips and perspectives folks, it helps a lot. Just as an update I finally hooked up the Denon 3800 and run a first quick Dirac calibration (with Bass control). Result is really good, at least compared to my previous Onkyo 1700 with just regular Dirac. I do have one issue in dialog is not kinda low, but otherwise I'm definitely getting a very immersive, clear and enveloping 3D surround effect, especially when engaging Auro 3D.
It could probably sound a lot better if I got proper speakers, subwoofers and ceiling Atmos speakers, but for what I have and the limitations of my room, I'm very happy with the results. I'll keep playing with Dirac to see if I can get better results.
Out of curiosity how did Dirac set up crossovers on your towers?Completely agree. But to be fair this was just a very rough and quick Dirac calibration. I’ll see if I can improve it further. The cs9080 center channel is a proven beast so I know it’s not the speaker but rather the calibration.
Why would 70hz be strange particularly?It set up everything at 70hz which is somewhat strange, so that's why I want to do another calibration.
May not be strange at all are you using the subs in the deftech towers like true subs routing to the LFE? This would have your mids and highs in the towers being crossed over I can see Dirac crossing them over to 70 it depends on the roomIt set up everything at 70hz which is somewhat strange, so that's why I want to do another calibration.
Def Tech recommends setting the bass management crossover to 80 Hz, so 70 Hz was close. The speakers in the bass management should be set to small.It set up everything at 70hz which is somewhat strange, so that's why I want to do another calibration.
You can certainly bump the center channel an couple of db up and see if it sounds better to you. There is always a chance that you're just amplifying an issue but you'll be able to tell. What is the crossover for the center?Gonna see what another calibration brings to the table. If the dialog is still too low, is there any harm in raising the center channel's level? Or will that harm the Dirac balance?
You can also try a higher crossover to see if it helps clear things up a bit, up to 120hz. I've sometimes found that some centers muddy the center up with lower crossover points. 80 is standard for THX as thats was the medium frequency that satisfied global non-localization for subwoofers but studies have shown that most people's hearing can't detect below 200hz unless the subs are located to the left and/or right of the MLP.thanks will try that. It's at 70hz too.
Sorry, but that is the wrong advice. The crossover from the mids in those Def Techs is 125 Hz. If he follows your advice then he will have crossovers only 5 Hz apart!You can also try a higher crossover to see if it helps clear things up a bit, up to 120hz. I've sometimes found that some centers muddy the center up with lower crossover points. 80 is standard for THX as thats was the medium frequency that satisfied global non-localization for subwoofers but studies have shown that most people's hearing can't detect below 200hz unless the subs are located to the left and/or right of the MLP.
Didn't see that they were that high, and the 120hz number was generalized not the recommendation as I thought it was the one with the subwoofers built in.Sorry, but that is the wrong advice. The crossover from the mids in those Def Techs is 125 Hz. If he follows your advice then he will have crossovers only 5 Hz apart!
This is part of his problem. Those Def Tecks pose pretty much an impossible integration problem. Def Tech recommend setting 80 Hz, which only half an octave apart, which is another train wreck. If anything the crossover needs to go down to about 40 Hz to get a decent spread between the crossovers.
The best advice is not to use those bass drivers, and use external subs, but the OP says he does not have room for them.
Actually Dirac probably did set the crossover close, as that is nearly an octave apart, but 40 Hz may well be better.
The issue here is how to make the best of a bad job, and that is never a good place to be.
It is, but it is not that simple, the crossover to the mids is passive high pass, but active low pass and the low pass blends with the sub output if you use it.Didn't see that they were that high, and the 120hz number was generalized not the recommendation as I thought it was the one with the subwoofers built in.