
AcuDefTechGuy
Audioholic Jedi
If I need bigger sound due to bigger space, I would just get bigger speakers. 
Agreed with everything you said. Let's get 5.1 right before moving on to XX.1. Most homes I visit have very poor speaker placement, bad or no calibration, and very dynamically limited speakers.I certainly don't intend to go beyond 7.1. Under domestic conditions I think 7.1 is max. I think people would be far better off with better speakers than more speakers.
I don't subscribe to the view that surround speakers can be far less capable than the rest. I fail to see how most surround speakers in use can really bring any benefit to the table. I would never consider adding a lousy ceiling speaker for instance.
Quite honestly I think you need a dedicated room for any surround system. My guess is that most members would be better off with good 2.1 or 3.1 rather than 5.1 or 7.1. For instance in our Eagan home I would never consider the space suitable for more than 3.1.
I don't think height channels are necessary in the home. With my system I get lots of height information, even with good two channel recordings.
I have a significant amount of program which pushes all speakers hard, and I can't begin to imagine the effect if all speakers were not powerful capable speakers.
I get excellent 360 degree localization and depth, as well as seamless overhead trajectories.
I think I have to vote War Horse as having the best movie sound track I know. The orchestra perspective is magnificent. A lot of the movie is outdoors and it really feels like it. There is huge depth to the sound stage all round and movement front to back and side to side continuous. So I'm convinced we can do a first class job with the channels we have. So my advice for anyone putting together a dedicated space, is to concentrate on really good speakers and amplification all round. Forget puny speakers anywhere in the system.
On another note, I find it strange that the 5.1 arrangement puts the surrounds at the side instead of the back. I say this as the European SACD layout is left and right front, front center and left and right rears. I think that is a much better 5.1 speaker layout as long as it was mixed that way. That is the way I play my European SACDs. In the Aho 12th symphony, there is circular Laplander drumming in the first movement. The drumming does go seamlessly round the room. Also there are multiple brass choirs and two either side where the surround speakers of a 5.1 system would be. The front and rear speakers of my rig can produce the phantom image where the silent surrounds are. You would not know they were silent. So the 5.1 layout will always remain a mystery to me. Frankly, I think it was a misguided choice, and we could have done perfectly well with European mix SACD speaker layout.
+1 this, however I don't think surround sound manufacturers should hold back just because there are so many poorly implemented 5 or 7.1 system. Let's be honest, not many people will ever take the time to properly setup their system, and that should not be a hindrance for those of us who do. If my understanding of Atmos is correct, it should help to compensate more for poorly placed surrounds than present setup schemes. Moreover, I think Atmos demands monopole surrounds, I don't think bipole or dipole or more diffuse speakers can be correctly calibrated with Atmos. The sooner that none-monopole surrounds die, the better.Agreed with everything you said. Let's get 5.1 right before moving on to XX.1. Most homes I visit have very poor speaker placement, bad or no calibration, and very dynamically limited speakers.
I also prefer monopole surrounds towards the back of the room in a 5.1 layout but I favor music over movies in my listening preferences.
I think this again misses the mark. The point of atmos is not more speakers, although more speakers are inherently supported. The last bullet point in the atmos features sums it up:Agreed with everything you said. Let's get 5.1 right before moving on to XX.1. Most homes I visit have very poor speaker placement, bad or no calibration, and very dynamically limited speakers.
The way I hear it, I am amazed that your place is still standing. Even my wife said to me "One day this house is coming down, this kid is crazier then you". Them tiles are not coming loose from just walking on them.Right now I'm running 9. 11 would be a stretch, but hey, I can just keep adding subwoofers until the place falls down.
Since Atmos is based on spatial representation (3d position with a volume) of the sounds instead of just being channel driven won't it help somewhat with all of that except speaker quality? Atmos requires speaker calibration which would include speaker location in angle space which none of the cal programs currently do since it requires multiple mics at the same time. This will give better spatial effects even with just 5 channels since the panning will compensate for poorly placed speakers to some extent and will cause more people to run cal in the first place. It doesn't fix everything but it is an improvement and as long as it's not huge $$$ to incorporate isn't this just a plus for the people who want it? I agree if you have to replace both your BD and your receiver it probably will flop but still it doesn't hurt the industry so why the cynicism? Why not highlight the positive?Let's get 5.1 right before moving on to XX.1. Most homes I visit have very poor speaker placement, bad or no calibration, and very dynamically limited speakers.
You make good points but from what I've heard. If more channels weren't the focus than why do Atmos theaters have 64 channels and why is Dolby pushing to add height channels to an already crammed 5.1/7.1 setup?Since Atmos is based on spatial representation (3d position with a volume) of the sounds instead of just being channel driven won't it help somewhat with all of that except speaker quality? Atmos requires speaker calibration which would include speaker location in angle space which none of the cal programs currently do since it requires multiple mics at the same time. This will give better spatial effects even with just 5 channels since the panning will compensate for poorly placed speakers to some extent and will cause more people to run cal in the first place. It doesn't fix everything but it is an improvement and as long as it's not huge $$$ to incorporate isn't this just a plus for the people who want it? I agree if you have to replace both your BD and your receiver it probably will flop but still it doesn't hurt the industry so why the cynicism? Why not highlight the positive?
I also keep seeing discreet channels mentioned, my understanding of Atmos is that it doesn't rely on channels at all, it treats sound in movies the same way video games treat objects. they have a location in space and the system calculates in real time knowing the position of your speakers how to recreate that sound as accurately as possible from your speakers in your space. To do this it has to know the orientation and location of all of your speakers.
Hi Andrew. I think I dug it off Google or our Facebook page. LOL.Not exactly on topic, but where did that speaker stack photo come from?
Though about as blurry as my natural eyesight these days, I do recognize some of those speakers, namely Pioneer (both woofer dustcaps pushed in, one is missing the vent!), Wharfedale, Celestion and KEF.
Andrew