Covenanter
Well-known member
Thompsonuxb said:Covenanter said:Thompsonuxb said:pauln said:Covenanter said:Thompsonuxb said:Covenanter said:I know what a sounds stage is- it's the aural image that you "see" most clearly when you close your eyes.
Can an amplifier change it? Well yes it can if it distorts the signal so as to change the ratio of the signals from the two speakers or it distorts the signal so that incorrect levels are presented to the speakers. Is either of those likely with modern amplifier design? No it is very unlikely. Pretty much all modern amplifiers have distortion levels well below anything humans can hear and that includes the differences between Class A and Class B. Soit seems very unlikely that an amplifier is going to affect the soundstage.
So what does affect soundstage? First and foremost it's the recording. In classical recordings it comes down to the placement of the instruments and that is particularly noticeable in pieces such as piano concertos where in bad recordings the piano is too loud which pushes it forward or too soft which pushes it backwards. Secondly it's the speaker / room combination and the geometry to the listening position. There are so many variables in that area that you can spend hours and days getting it right.
So IMO to get a good soundstage you should (a) buy good recordings and (b) experiment with your speakers until you are happy. As for the amplifier, as long as it is powerful enough to drive the speakers and is a modern design the I very much doubt it will have any effect at all.
Chris
There is so much wrong with this post, a contradictory effort.
Have you ever heard an amp with a DSP - Jazz, concert hall, etc. Have you heard the difference it makes to music.
Have you heard an amp with good power delivery drive a pair of speakers and compared it with a lesser designed amp driving the same speakers?
Recorded music is fixed. It will not change from device to device. It is what it is.
I mean even volume effects the 'soundstage' in terms of depth. ...your 'opinion' could not be more wrong.
Can you actually read?
Chris
Reading is the easy part, understanding is much harder.
Lol....
Look, I'm not trying to put anybody down or diss them - like the young folk say.
But c'mon, how are you going to argue 'if's'.... Then continue to argue all 'should' sound the same?
Different designs philosophys will yield different results - which become more apparent with time.
We know when all else remains the same in a set the sound can be completely altered with a press of a button.
So what makes you think a manufacturer cannot tune an amp to add its own signature?
I'll try again! What do you mean by "tune"?
Chris
Last time out someone asked me to explain 'assertive' ref an interconnect - opened up a can a worms.
Tune - manipulate the signal as it passes from input of an amp across its innards to the output of an amp.
Some amps deliver a better mid-range, ambient detail some a more detailed presentation others more bass.
This is by design.
I recall when Cyrus had to change certain materials in their Amps that resulted in a more robust sound according to WHF....
But I suspect you know exactly what's meant by the term.....
So, if as you say some manufacturers "tune" their amps for more bass or mid-range or whatever, why do they all have almost flat frequency responses? If for example an amp had more bass it would have to show a frequency response that slopes upwards towards lower frequencies. Can you show me one?
Chris