Hi,
On Saturday 31 July 2010 04:40:28 Bearcat M. Şandor wrote:
I'm a recovering audiophile. When i was reading
the magazines and
reading about over priced (in my now opinion) speakers, the words "full
range" tended to mean that a speaker was reasonably flat from 20 Hz to
20 kHz. Granted those were unusual.
I have read that speakers in an ambisonic set up should be "full range".
I'd like to set up a ambisonic speaker system (8 channel to start), and
the prospect of 8 full range channels is daunting. Since it seems they
would be stand or wall mounted (at least some of them) that means
monitors and subwoofers. Since all channels must be the same, that means
8 subwoofers...somewhere in the room.
So what does "full range" mean usually and what does it mean in terms of
talk on this list?
I realized that my jbl-speakers I use additionally to my alesis are a little
light on the lower end. So I (mis-)used ambdec's crossover to give me one
matrix with the 100Hz and above for the whole setup and one matrix for below
100Hz that just contains and feeds the main alesis speakers. Works pretty well
as far as I am concerned...
Of course, each speakers signal is also feed through jconvolver with a drc-ir
to make it sound superb (as opposed to just the plain good sound of the
speakers).
I think that full-range in the sense of ambisonics just means (a) that its
more then the little rear--satellites you find in 5.1/7.1 and (b) that every
speaker is supposed to get (and reproduce) the whole spectrum according to its
abilities.
Have fun,
Arnold