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My old article on Loudspeaker Imaging

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  • #76
    Re: So much of what's been said...


    > But there are some heavily-engineered discs
    > out there that will employ certain tricks to
    > generate illusions of sounds coming from
    > farther beyond the speakers. Part of how
    > they do this is by employing phase
    > cancellations. Shoot a selected sound, say
    > from the left speaker, and then shoot a
    > phase-cancelling signal from the right, with
    > appropriate sound muffling, to
    > minimize/cancel what your right ear gets to
    > hear. You can tell there are a lot of things
    > that can go wrong so really not a lot of
    > systems (in their rooms) pull it off well in
    > my experience.

    I hear this frequently on movie tracks. What I don't hear is anything close on standard 2-channel audio without any gimmicks used such as phasing. Reviewers wax loquacious at speaker systems all the time about soundstage wider than the speakers. Most of the time I think they're just dreaming. Maybe they're getting some modicum of reflections that give an overall impression on wider expanse. I don't like to have nearby side walls, so I don't get the influence.

    dlr
    WinPCD - Windows .NET Passive Crossover Designer

    Dave's Speaker Pages

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    • #77
      Re: My old article on Loudspeaker Imaging

      Bump

      --It hasn't been that long since this thread was originally opened.
      --It seems like higher resolution DACs should better be able to reproduce the micro dynamics.
      --A good combination of directivity control, power response, low distortion drivers and low order crossovers ought to make for good imaging.
      --Which frequencies are most critical to imaging>?

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      • #78
        Re: My old article on Loudspeaker Imaging

        Originally posted by brianpowers27 View Post
        --Which frequencies are most critical to imaging>?
        Read Blauert "Spatial Hearing"
        Isn't it about time we started answering rhetorical questions?

        Paul Carmody's DIY Audio Projects
        Twitter: @undefinition1

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        • #79
          Re: My old article on Loudspeaker Imaging

          Originally posted by Paul Carmody View Post
          Read Blauert "Spatial Hearing"
          Available online for free viewing

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          • #80
            it's all illusion

            and as Dave (dbe) points out one can create localization illusion easily at the console . . . in fact "localization" in *all* studio recording is "fiction" to some significant extent.

            Live recording a symphony while preserving lateral "localization" is a different story . . . it's often difficult to localize instruments, or even whole sections, from more than half way back in the hall *at the performance*. Of course the mics are placed closer than that, and there are both amplitude (spaced and Blumlein) and phase (ORTF) cues that *can* (but do not always) provide "better than life" localization (ORTF placement actually includes both amplitude and phase cues, as does the "Decca Tree", and those placements probably give the best localization results (unless sections/instruments are miced individually and false cues added at the console)). I believe that the "phase" cues really amount to little more than "relative time of arrival" . . . that being what our ears actually hear. It is obviously frequency dependent (which is why we can localize high frequencies better than low), and it all has to happen before first reflection from the listening room. After that we are hearing room size cues which may or may not let us ignore the immediate listening environment and "hear the original venue".

            "Depth" perception is a bit different, and in orchestral recording I believe it comes largely from the delay time of rear wall or shell reflections. It's clearly not an amplitude effect . . . the trumpets can play loud or soft and not seem to move, but if actually moved on stage that is immediately obvious. For instruments downstage (usually strings and piano/other soloists) the shell reflection is substantially delayed (the round trip is, after all, a minimum of 50 and often as much as 100 ft.) or completely lost in other hall reflections. Instruments placed further upstage have an earlier reflection, which we interpret as them being closer to the shell, or further away than the strings. That may give a sense of "depth" even in a monaural recording, at least to someone familiar with live orchestral sound. Pronounced "front wall" reflections in the listening room can completely swamp these recorded clues and limit the depth illusion to no deeper than the speaker-wall distance, if that.

            It is also amazing just how much a picture of the orchestra (actual or remembered (imagined)) can help in "localizing" the individual instruments . . . ;)
            "It suggests that there is something that is happening in the real system that is not quite captured in the models."

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            • #81
              Re: it's all illusion

              Originally posted by Deward Hastings View Post
              "Depth" perception is a bit different, and in orchestral recording I believe it comes largely from the delay time of rear wall or shell reflections. It's clearly not an amplitude effect . . . the trumpets can play loud or soft and not seem to move, but if actually moved on stage that is immediately obvious. For instruments downstage (usually strings and piano/other soloists) the shell reflection is substantially delayed (the round trip is, after all, a minimum of 50 and often as much as 100 ft.) or completely lost in other hall reflections. Instruments placed further upstage have an earlier reflection, which we interpret as them being closer to the shell, or further away than the strings. That may give a sense of "depth" even in a monaural recording, at least to someone familiar with live orchestral sound. Pronounced "front wall" reflections in the listening room can completely swamp these recorded clues and limit the depth illusion to no deeper than the speaker-wall distance, if that.
              Depending on the hall architecture and mic placement, different orchestral recordings can contain very different depth information. I set up a little system out in the back yard for most of the summer, where there were no listening room reflections to confuse things. Some orchestral recordings had tremendous depth, while others seemed to put everything at the plane of the speakers.

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              • #82
                Re: My old article on Loudspeaker Imaging

                After thinking about this article I decided to take a mono recording of my acoustic guitar with the ecm8000. I took the same track and presented it three times, one raw, one with an artificial stereo and one with artificial stereo + reverb + multiband compression.

                I think it is interesting from the standpoint of seeing what recording techniques can do to the sound. I would like to get a second mic and take stereo recording with me walking around the room.

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                • #83
                  Re: it's all illusion

                  Originally posted by brianp View Post
                  Depending on the hall architecture and mic placement, different orchestral recordings can contain very different depth information.
                  Yep. And that architecture and placement information is rarely disclosed in album/liner notes, so it is difficult to draw any conclusions. The recordings with the most obvious "depth" may well be multi-miced (quasi studio recorded) and the "depth" cues entirely artificial. I've seen examples where an orchestra's album picture was an entirely different venue than that in which the recording was made (with no disclosure of that in the notes). Opera recordings in particular are commonly "studio" recorded, and the sound of the recording bears no resemblance to what you would hear at an actual performance (with the orchestra in the pit and singers on stage). Even the "thumps and bumps" of a stage performance may be faked in the studio or added in post, like Foley effects in a movie.
                  "It suggests that there is something that is happening in the real system that is not quite captured in the models."

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                  • #84
                    Re: My old article on Loudspeaker Imaging

                    Originally posted by brianpowers27 View Post
                    Bump

                    --It hasn't been that long since this thread was originally opened.
                    --It seems like higher resolution DACs should better be able to reproduce the micro dynamics.
                    --A good combination of directivity control, power response, low distortion drivers and low order crossovers ought to make for good imaging.
                    --Which frequencies are most critical to imaging>?
                    Yep, this is a great topic for discussion as it is one that has so many aspects that can be discussed an debated to the cows (or dogs or your favorite animal inserted here___________) come home.

                    Capturing an acoustic event in a good stereo recording is the product of proper micing techniques that are time tested (Blumlein, Decca tree, et al) or some new revisions on technique such as Ray Kimber's Iso-mike which gives breathtaking results.

                    Studio localization/isolation recording is a completely different animal which uses the different panning techniques discussed above (I think, it has been a long time since this thread was written). The different techniques in recordings yield different results on different speaker types. This was readily apparent as I walked around at RMAF. Too many etched, excessive HF systems for that audiophile "gotcha" sound. It is exciting to listen to for about 2 minutes: huge soundstage and larger than life instruments that give way to figeting and leemee oudahere thoughts in no time.

                    As always, what makes good imaging in a speaker is faithful recreation of a good recording with low distortion and coloration. The TAD speakers did it in aces.... for $60K. A few other rooms sounded good, too. The ones that did worked the room for all it was worth. Treatment where necessary and good music selection makes a world of difference.

                    I'm glad to see this topic live again. Maybe one of you guys will start a new one and get some discussion going. Me, I'm headed to bed.

                    Later,

                    Dave
                    "A man with an experience is never at the mercy of a man with an argument." - Hilmar von Campe

                    www.piaudiogroup.com

                    http://www.avguide.com/blog/tas-rmaf...w-technologies
                    http://positive-feedback.com/Issue47/ramblings.htm
                    http://positive-feedback.com/Issue47/uber_buss.htm

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                    • #85
                      Re: My old article on Loudspeaker Imaging

                      jeff, the meat to potatoe ratio was just fine. i read a post earlier by lunch and lunch said "So.... yes, this made a really big difference... the sound stage is much deeper and more spacious now, and yet the imaging is also tighter... Miles and Coltraine sounded incredible. Every musician had their own distinct position about 10 feet behind the speakers... close your eyes and smile " in this post


                      your thoughts on this?


                      thanks for another great writeup if had gotten much more technical i probably would have not finished it.
                      " To me, the soundstage presentation is more about phase and distortion and less about size. However, when you talk about bass extension, there's no replacement for displacement". Tyger23. 4.2015

                      Quote Originally Posted by hongrn. Oct 2014
                      Do you realize that being an American is like winning the biggest jackpot ever??

                      http://www.midwestaudioclub.com/spot...owell-simpson/
                      http://s413.photobucket.com/albums/pp216/arlis/

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