Dear all
Well it is seldom that I don't have a rapid remark to drop on an empty page when something new is applied to the XX. E.g. when Peter launch a 9d and a 9h or whatever had come over the time.
This time however I have been forced to keep my pistol in the belt as with the 9i incorporating the Qt controler, it has been much much more difficult to find a vocabulary to elaborate about it, even its so obvious impact. I had to run zillions of A-B'ing between my prefered 9h against the 9i before i felt sure what the big change is about.
I see I'm not alone. No one really commented it until sofar.
Let's start with the easy part: The polarity reverser.
Bravo. Not much more to say about it. On most recorded music it does not make a big difference as they all are multi-phased and screwed up by studio machines and engineers who does not care about this. But fortunately the are simple stereo-mic recordings, single voice, single instrument and alikes, where this feature really makes a difference. The blow-suck feature is a goodie we now have on hand and it's so easy to detect the difference it makes. So
The Qt controler on the other hand is a major step towards perfect playback, but in a completely different compartment.
What does it do? Well yes, it does what Peter says it does. Removing square distortion or resonances appearing from sound trapped in a horn. Removes the walls from the horn as if the horn is not there anymore. What a story I'm telling
(And Peter did'nt say excactly that, sorry).
If we imagine how it was possible for the XX to eliminate irritating standing vawes in the listening room without actually removing them at all, but just made them far less anoying it is maybe more easy to understand what I try to say here. As well as standing vawes is an outcome of traped sound in a given room, eventual resonances is an outcome of trapped sound in a horn.
The big difference is that trapping sound in a horn however is appearing in a much higher frequency specter and a specter where our ears are much much more sensitive to it.
Conclusion: Yes. The horn is there but it's audibility is gone. It's own footprint disapppeared.
I'm not capable of explaining the scientific reason for it. Peter is maybe as he's the one who found the medicine. But for me as a "user" i neither need to know. I can just be a widness to reject or like it.
But let me give you a bit more.
So A-B'ing now 100 of tracks against the 9h (left the 9d in the drawer somewhere) again and again, it is certainly not just about to find one setting of the Qt controller and just leave it there. There are simply too many different fiaskoes and succeses between the numerous recordings we have.
But to give you a beta-version of my present conclusion, so called audiophile recordings needs a tweak of approx 4 to remove resonance related audibility and make the speakers completely disappear, and some awefull squared and harsh recordings needs a setting of up to 15. And still it does not not cure everything, but God damn, it helps. The latter is the best example of how good the Qt controller is and how much it just spots the problem and attack it based on the right diagnosis and the precise medicine.
I cannot do anything but leave out what I know nothing about: How it is possible that a piece of SW can deal with it. But it can.
Now I mentioned trapped sound in a horn as being part of the fact that a horn by it self is audible when listening to music. It's unavoidable as well as we have footprints from each and every piece of mechanical thing that forms the whole speaker. That be from the cabinet to driver colorations and whatever affect the final result.
But I see now that much that provokes or emphasize those things to be audible is triggered by the signal feed to it. And my equation tells me that it does the same trick to any playback set-up. If not tell me.
Hence Peter saw it. Hence he knew what it was. Hence he made the Qt controler. Hence it deals with the phase and it's ability to provoke distortion and resonances and in particular "HOW WE PERCEIVE IT", because it is still there. He didn't remove the horn or anything related to the equipment or the other speaker ingrediences. He did'nt make any surgery in our brains or changed physical laws by it.
He just knew how phase is related to perception of sound. That's it.
Have I now better sound....Oh yes yes yes... As I said the speakers are gone and I mean they are really gone. Where I noticed sound emitting from the speaker itself on most recordings and thereby used a lot of brainprocessing to place that sound to the right place in the sound stage, I am now free'ed from doing that, as each and every bit of information suddently ran home to it's own source, namely the instrument or voice where it originally came from. Bang!
I filed of course a complaint to Bert that my speakers disappeared and I want my money back....ha ha ha.
The only anoying thing is a beginners one. You try and retry again and again to find the right setting for a given track until you are satisfied. But along the way you compromise as a result of lazyness or lack of interest and leave the Qt controler mostly in one final position. And mine became 7. At least for now.
Most of the music I listen to are treated best here. And if I play some Dave Sanborne sax it goes immediately to 15. I just know it by heart now. Many close mic female voice recordings goes likewise to 15.
And I completely forgot to address that the bass improves from the Qt controler as well, so if any got the impression that this is only medicine for horns, it isn't.
So for now....enjoy the magic of the Qt.
Gerner