
William Lemmerhirt
Audioholic Overlord
Couldn't agree more!I'm ordering a mic from Mark Seaton, if it's good enough for him then it's good enough for me.![]()
Couldn't agree more!I'm ordering a mic from Mark Seaton, if it's good enough for him then it's good enough for me.![]()
I would. I've had good results with pretty much any laptop so long as enhancements are disabled.Below about 100hz I wouldn't trust a laptop mic, or it's orientation. Klipschead, seems to me you investing in your gear is a priority, and accuracy is what you're after. Buy a mic, it's 50 bucks.
http://www.parts-express.com/dayton-audio-emm-6-electret-measurement-microphone--390-801
Btw, room looks great.
Ok. We'll agree to disagree then. If you're happy with the results keep going. My opinion is just different than yours.I would. I've had good results with pretty much any laptop so long as enhancements are disabled.
I know its been awhile, but I wanted to check back to take the temperature of Atmos and see if it has caught on as others have said it would.I would say 99% of receiver owners don't use 50% of the features, doesn't mean they don't improve the experience. You are so focused on your opinion that you fail to recognize others. In mid to larger sized movie room it enhances my experience, it is not over the top. Smaller rooms it doesn't make sense, neither does 7.1 or 5.1 in some cases. It is all relative.
You are a master of redundancy LOL, you are definitely entitled to your option and I will choose to disagree with you. Btw, Atmos is pretty cool in a dedicated home theater room.I know its been awhile, but I wanted to check back to take the temperature of Atmos and see if it has caught on as others have said it would.
To my observation, here over the midpoint of 2017, Atmos still remains an ultra-niche format as far as the home market is concerned. I strongly believe that is where it will remain at least until the next technological "superfluous" audio format is introduced to the home market and we all know that's going to happen.
Again, I would say, Atmos would probably be pretty cool set up in a dedicated theater room where there is space for all the speakers and amps to do Atmos right, especially for someone just deciding to get into home theater. However, that's the few, the ultra-niche.
At the same time, new 7.2 receivers come standard with atmos, and more and note blurays are being released with it. Add on modules, while not quite as good as overhead speakers, still work, especially ones with good directivity. In the same way first reflections across the front stage make the sound stage wider, reflections off the ceiling make it higher, especially when the SPL of those reflections is higher than the direct sound. I really don't see it being a niche.Atmos is attractive to those with real home-theaters, many with projectors.
Dolby Vision is emerging and as an OLED owner, I can say it is a great addition. There is no Dolby Vision for projectors since the luminance varies with lamp age. Laser should change that.
In the meantime, there is something for everyone
- Rich
Bottomline, Atmos was planned obsolescence, but I don't believe it worked. I would like to see some hard numbers. I don't believe that many people junked their existing receivers for Atmos equipped receivers.I think some have a bit of a misconception when it comes to Atmos. This thread has a lot of talk about dedicated theaters and using more speakers, but Atmos is a audio codec that happens to support more speakers. I'm pretty sure every or 90% of new receivers support Atmos at this point.
Just because you have Atmos doesn't mean you have to have tons of speakers. So it isn't really a niche product unless you're referring to the tons of speakers aspect, then yes it is. So are dedicated theaters.
Atmos as a whole isn't going anywhere.
I think you're mixing up what I said. Atmos isn't one thing, it's two.Bottomline, Atmos was planned obsolescence, but I don't believe it worked. I would like to see some hard numbers. I don't believe that many people junked their existing receivers for Atmos equipped receivers.
Atmos was introduced to the consumer market to get people buy new equipment, plain and simple. Why even bother with Atmos if you're not going to do it right.
Yeah, Atmos might not be going anywhere, however it will remain as an ultra niche format.
I prefer that A/V receivers have better amps than some new, unnecessary sound format, remember, sound is only 50 percent of the movie experience, however Dolby is trying make sound the primary reasons for going to see a movie.
Ultra niche...I agree.Bottomline, Atmos was planned obsolescence, but I don't believe it worked. I would like to see some hard numbers. I don't believe that many people junked their existing receivers for Atmos equipped receivers.
Atmos was introduced to the consumer market to get people buy new equipment, plain and simple. Why even bother with Atmos if you're not going to do it right.
Yeah, Atmos might not be going anywhere, however it will remain as an ultra niche format.
I prefer that A/V receivers have better amps than some new, unnecessary sound format, remember, sound is only 50 percent of the movie experience, however Dolby is trying make sound the primary reasons for going to see a movie.
Agree on the quality aspect. I used an Onkyo 805 back in the day at work and that sucker was 7ch and weighed close to 60 lbs. My 809 weighs 47 with the same number of channels. My new denon 4300h is something like 37 with two extra channels. They are skimping on the PSU for sure.The bar has always been raised high for the high end, sometimes ridiculously too high.
I see the quality of A/V receivers going down in exchange for new fangled technologies.
I remember my old B&K A/V receiver, it was built like a tank, you didn't need separate amps with it. Now todays receivers are like toys, however they do have Dolby Atmos, Hi-Res, DTS-X, etc. with the exception of Dolby Atmos, the other two are virtually useless, yet they drive up the price of receivers.
Again, I rather pay extra for better amps and more advanced auto-calibration than usound modes.
Yeah but we have to pay extra for them to remove the ampsAgain, I rather pay extra for better amps and more advanced auto-calibration than usound modes.
I never bought into matrix like PLIIz and DTS-Neo for movies, although I will employ them on older movies and some Indy films with only stereo sound tracks. However , I do find that they work well for music listening.99% of HT receivers were already capable of playback at 24/192 anyways, so it's not really a new feature.
Just going based off bench tests from AH and sound and vision, it seems denon and Yamaha are probably the worst offenders as far as lousy amp performance, I have yet to see an onkyo fail to meet its specifies rating, even in multichannel tests within 80%, but then again, they dropped audyssey in favor of their disastrous accueq, allowing them to use less powerful processing chips (both atmos and audyssey are fairly taxing).
I don't know if atmos is the cause of lousier power supplies, receivers have been going downhill way before atmos.
The major gripe I have is $2k+ flagship receivers showing crappy bench results on the amp section, that's just inexcusable. Makes you wonder where that extra cash is going, i highly doubt a few more transistors, preouts, inputs etc. for 9.1 vs 7.1 justifies an extra $1200 if the amp section isn't getting a significant upgrade. It's not that manufacturers can't get decent performance with 9-11 channels.
Either way, I personally feel atmos is about as big of an improvement as discrete 5.1. Object based audio that can move along 3 dimensions just sounds so much more realistic than 5.1 or 7.1, and much of the attempt to matrix height channels (PLIIz and Neo X) suck in comparison to the real thing.
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Yes they are skimping.Agree on the quality aspect. I used an Onkyo 805 back in the day at work and that sucker was 7ch and weighed close to 60 lbs. My 809 weighs 47 with the same number of channels. My new denon 4300h is something like 37 with two extra channels. They are skimping on the PSU for sure.
PLIIz kinda sucked. Neo: X was actually a great decoder considering the fact it was a matrix decoder. I personally think Dolby Surround is a much bigger improvement. Neural:X works great with multichannel content but is a comb filtering unstable mess with 2ch content. I feel like DSU upmixes both movies and music, stereo or multichannel, in a completely natural sounding way, in fact it works so well that I find I hard to listen to music in stereo anymore.I never bought into matrix like PLIIz and DTS-Neo for movies, although I will employ them on older movies and some Indy films with only stereo sound tracks. However , I do find that they work well for music listening.
I remember the first time I heard sound on top my head from an Atmos demo, I thought it was kind of gimmicky. Having said that, again, If I was building a system from the ground up, with a dedicated room, I would go Atmos all the way. I don't have a problem with 3 dimensional sounds, I just don't like what you have to do in order to get it right. For example, I have always been skeptical in ceiling speakers. How are they going to match my mains. Also, those awful speakers that shoot sounds up to ceilings, that Gene talked about, I would never purchase.
BTW, they finally installed a Dolby Cinema room in my neighborhood, can't wait for something worth watching to go see. I really feel that Dolby Atmos is better suited for the commercial theater. Some systems were not meant for the home. So glad you can't do IMAX in the home.