We can also try to put this in another way :
When things sound bad/wrong etc. etc., the very first thing "we" learned is : it will be the room.
It is our very first huge excuse.Never EVER I have seen this proven to be correct.
Now let's keep in mind : everybody reading this will not agree. I know that, and it's okay. However :
When you really want to proceed in audio you must NOT come up with this excuse. It will hold you back forever.
Of course, the room sizes must be adequate. The room is not allowed to inherently ring.
It is also good to keep in mind that without exception I ran into, we audiophiles ALWAYS blame the room. This makes anyone coming up with proof by means of tests and papers and articles etc. etc. right.
And still, when this is the attitude you will get nowhere.
Again without exception, when I run into a situation where things don't sound right and the room is blamed, I *will* find something which just is wrong and it is not the room.
In 100% cases it went like that.
Those who followed the "First Windows 8 experience" topic can see how I for the very first time in over 5 years "had to" touch my speakers because perceivedly they could be better positioned. It helped.
So it helped. But nothing was right and it can't be made right, and all I did was violating my own rule. read through that topic and see the exact sequence of happenings, and how I started to violate my own rule because I wanted a way out.
It is the wrong thing to do, because you will NOT get there; When things are wrong they are wrong and you are not to solve that by tweaking the room. But ... do so, and know that you will have destroyed forever.
We audiophiles are so freaking ignorant on these subjects, that a person listening to my "system" was able to tell me that I should move my speakers such and so and whatnot, while I could exactly point out what was wrong, how it should be, how it can't be so that moving speakers will help "because" etc., while out of all this same person knows my sound from earlier times (which was just W7).
Do we get it now ? Even with person to person speaking, me knowing exactly what I am doing, STILL we ignorant pricks blame the room. And so I am not going to convince you by means of posting in a forum.
Sure the room is important but since it is a personal reference then the differences made to the equipment in THAT room should be noticeable just the same so let’s agree that I do not agree with you here.
A bit hard to see the merits of this, but I think I know what Bert means. But do notice please : Bert is a person who always "fights" with speakers and get good sound from them. Obvious, when it is your work and goal for life. But the same Bert blamed his room wherever he could when something was not right or optimal in the filter department, up to not-so working out designs. I didn't count, but it can well have happened 50 times (I am serious) that something did not work because of "the room" according to Bert, who indeed does not have an optimal listening room. As many times (same 50) I said "no !" and while in half of the times we could find a culprit, the other half could be split in an "undoable for this design" or "see ? all works now".
It can not be explained, other than trying to point at reality;
Bert's current speakers (see his avatar for one of them) were designed with a "no limits" idea. They should exhibit the best of the very best, and size of them nor room where they could end up in later should be limiting. And mind you, part of this is 4 15" woofers per side, so don't think this is not challenging for rooms;
It may not be of the most importance, but the design includes things which have not been done before, but which "things" exactly would eliminate the room influence. Good or bad. Positioning them right in a corner when you like - it doesn't matter a thing. Point is :
This was all well thought over, and while other designs needed attention to every nasty corner of every nasty room, this time we could 100% see it would work and no prerequisites would be needed.
And it just worked.
You want to play at 130dBSPL ? go ahead. No room will react to it. Even Bert's own room is right and stays so at any level.
It may be hard to see the relation with the subject, but what I tried to point out with the above, is that it is ALL about the source. Source = Audio System and System does not include the room. For the final result yes, but the audio system does not include the room. How could it, when made by manufacturers.
How could it ? Ha ! By making it independent of it. This is what I explicitly do with XHighEnd, this is what I more explicitly *can* do with the NOS1 DAC, this is what we do with very neutral GainClones and this is what can be done by well designed speakers.
I'm fairly sure I can convince you of this :
Wrongly designed audio gear will exhibit its wrongness. I'm sure we all think it is hard to point out how by means of a forum post, but outside of sheer distortion it is easy : it buzzes because it can't keep its things together, so to speak. But the buzzing are standing waves (trust me !) in all frequencies, and now what would happen when the audio manufacturer first decorates his room to in finesse, and then listens to his product. It may sound great.
Remove the decoration and it sounds awful. Ah. Why ? well because it is an awful product. Make it a good product and the decoration is not needed.
If you don't believe the above you are an ignorant audiophile. Why ? well, because a couple of manufacturers who go for the best only AND created that, tell you.
So how ignorant can an audiophile be ? How much can he be stuck in old school thinking ?
All right. Through this post I only wanted to make clear that I don't agree with a couple of things, but that it is not wrong to have another idea than I do, and that it certainly is not so that you are not allowed to vent those ideas. Only two or three will agree with it anyway.
Regards,
Peter
PS: I have glass on four sides. On estimate this is 65% of all the "wall" surface.