Hi guys.
I am finding it hard to feel happy with my home audio setup! A little background. I was into hi-fi around 10 years ago having an Arcam CD player, Marantz amp, Wharfdale speakers (not the best!) and semi decent interconnects. I was always very happy with the sound from almost all the music I listened to, which includes a broad and varried selection!
After a house move and some space constraints I ended up listening to a lot of music on the computer and for the best part of 7-8 years used JBL Creature (1,2 and 3) desktop speakers and sub as well as Bang & Olufsen earset headphones. Whilst by no means been elite I was always happy with the sound yet through various cirumstances (headphones usually dont last longer than 6 months and I moved the JBLs into the living room to run on the TV) I decided to serioulsy upgrade my set up (stay with me, im getting there!)
All my music is digital in iTunes, a mix of Apple Lossless and 256/320 MP3s. I work in a conservatory which is fairly spacious, easily 10 feet by 14 feet, however mostly glass (not sure how much this affects sound!) so I began rooting aroung online for desktop speakers. My first purchase were the Bose Companion 20s after reading some favourable reviews however I sent these back after less than a week. Very base heavy and I found it impossible to get them to sound right even with some heavy EQing. So after a little more reading around I decided to push the boat out and went for the Audioengine A5+ and D1 DAC. I still have these and at times they can sound awesome, however I am still not able to feel satisfied with there overall level of sound and performance across the board. Certain music sounds amazing, typically dance, electronic, classical. However rock, metal, some rap, anything with a stong midrange sounds very unsatisfying. Very base heavy at times, muffled, vocals and high end stuff can be dround out my muffled overpowering base and midrange. Even with some EQing some of my favourite tracks sound awful.
So, finally a question for you! What should I do to get the best possible sound of of a desktop setup?! I have tried evrything form changing the set up of the room, speaker positions, EQ settings, I have swapped between iTunes/VLC/JMRiver to try and get the best sound and for the £500 I have spent I am really not completely satisifed.I have decided to extend my budget to +£1000 and with regards to where to go form here I have been looking at a few options.
1) Swapping the speakers for something a little more upmarket, maybe the KEF300A, but I have read mixed reviwes on these and I am not sure what they will do the Audioengine A5+ wont.
2) Invest in some actual hifi, so a decent amp and bookshelf speakers and simply use my Mac as in input to the amp.
3) Sack off the speakers/amp altogether and use the money to buy a very good pair of headphones.
I am leaning towards 3, then 2, and 1 is more a last resort. Any ideas suggestions?! I could probably extend to £1500 with the £500 I would get back from the bits I have already bought. All feeback welcome! Thanks for reading!
I am finding it hard to feel happy with my home audio setup! A little background. I was into hi-fi around 10 years ago having an Arcam CD player, Marantz amp, Wharfdale speakers (not the best!) and semi decent interconnects. I was always very happy with the sound from almost all the music I listened to, which includes a broad and varried selection!
After a house move and some space constraints I ended up listening to a lot of music on the computer and for the best part of 7-8 years used JBL Creature (1,2 and 3) desktop speakers and sub as well as Bang & Olufsen earset headphones. Whilst by no means been elite I was always happy with the sound yet through various cirumstances (headphones usually dont last longer than 6 months and I moved the JBLs into the living room to run on the TV) I decided to serioulsy upgrade my set up (stay with me, im getting there!)
All my music is digital in iTunes, a mix of Apple Lossless and 256/320 MP3s. I work in a conservatory which is fairly spacious, easily 10 feet by 14 feet, however mostly glass (not sure how much this affects sound!) so I began rooting aroung online for desktop speakers. My first purchase were the Bose Companion 20s after reading some favourable reviews however I sent these back after less than a week. Very base heavy and I found it impossible to get them to sound right even with some heavy EQing. So after a little more reading around I decided to push the boat out and went for the Audioengine A5+ and D1 DAC. I still have these and at times they can sound awesome, however I am still not able to feel satisfied with there overall level of sound and performance across the board. Certain music sounds amazing, typically dance, electronic, classical. However rock, metal, some rap, anything with a stong midrange sounds very unsatisfying. Very base heavy at times, muffled, vocals and high end stuff can be dround out my muffled overpowering base and midrange. Even with some EQing some of my favourite tracks sound awful.
So, finally a question for you! What should I do to get the best possible sound of of a desktop setup?! I have tried evrything form changing the set up of the room, speaker positions, EQ settings, I have swapped between iTunes/VLC/JMRiver to try and get the best sound and for the £500 I have spent I am really not completely satisifed.I have decided to extend my budget to +£1000 and with regards to where to go form here I have been looking at a few options.
1) Swapping the speakers for something a little more upmarket, maybe the KEF300A, but I have read mixed reviwes on these and I am not sure what they will do the Audioengine A5+ wont.
2) Invest in some actual hifi, so a decent amp and bookshelf speakers and simply use my Mac as in input to the amp.
3) Sack off the speakers/amp altogether and use the money to buy a very good pair of headphones.
I am leaning towards 3, then 2, and 1 is more a last resort. Any ideas suggestions?! I could probably extend to £1500 with the £500 I would get back from the bits I have already bought. All feeback welcome! Thanks for reading!