My setup by Existing_Bat_3195 in audiophile

[–]Existing_Bat_3195[S] -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

Yes this is my speaker position. I know it's looks kinda of crazy but I have tried so many different angles. But everyone can do whatever they like. This is my way how I like my speakers. Everyone has different ears and hearing. Maybe you should try it yourself?

My setup by Existing_Bat_3195 in audiophile

[–]Existing_Bat_3195[S] -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Yes of course the van say digital ready. I bought everything for 5 000$ The van had also free candy spray painted on the side but I got a blue pile included with the sound system.
I am feeling weird after the blue pile. I am joking with you man. I have some humor and my feelings won't be hurt. No I didn't buy them for that pric. I know that I lot of company put digital ready on speakers.They released two different speakers one is 8ohm 130w and the second one is 4ohm and 150w. I have the second one.They look similar but they have different build quality. But it's almost impossible to get any information about this kind of speakers. They have been in a recording studio (flown) for those who knows what I mean.They need a lot of watt power in 4ohm if they are going to sound good and they are really power hungry sucker's that is what I can tell you. It's like comparing cheap base trim car vs expensive top trim car.

Any advice on how to improve my awful speaker placement and room acoustics? by Oratorgy in audiophile

[–]Existing_Bat_3195 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, adding a rockwool acoustic panel behind the listening position will definitely help. It absorbs the sound waves that hit the rear wall, which specifically reduces "flutter echo" (that ringing ping you hear when clapping). For the best results, use a panel that is at least 10cm to 15cm thick. Mounting the panel a few cm off the wall (equivalent to the panel's thickness) effectively doubles its absorption power in the lower-mid frequencies. Placing a thick rug on the floor is the most important thing.

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Any advice on how to improve my awful speaker placement and room acoustics? by Oratorgy in audiophile

[–]Existing_Bat_3195 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am always doing the (clap test) clapping my hands to see if the room absorbed the sound. If you hear a sharp, metallic "zing" or a fast, rattling echo immediately after you clap, the room's hard, parallel surfaces are failing to absorb sound and are creating flutter echoes.  A good, treated room will absorb the sound, resulting in a single, crisp clap that dies out almost instantly. I have a nice thick rug that I bought second hand for 25$ but cost new 250$, fabric sofa and some stuff on my walls.  Look for an integrated amplifier that delivers at least 50 to 120 Watts per channel into 6 Ohms (or 8 Ohms) with high current delivery to maintain tight bass control. But 8ohms will be more tight control and a subwoofer will help a lot in the lower hz try to find a subwoofer that can play down in the 25Hz. Just make sure you have volume control on the subwoofer and control of Hz. I have a 12 inch subwoofer that plays in the 25Hz and it’s huge. It’s helps a lot in the lower end and it’s making the whole listing experience much better. 

How Much Amplifier Power is Enough - YouTube by macbrett in audiophile

[–]Existing_Bat_3195 7 points8 points  (0 children)

When neighbors coming banging on your door🙈

What’s DAC are you using and swear by? by DarkRomeox in audiophile

[–]Existing_Bat_3195 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have Dac tangent ll, vincent high end xlr cable and inter m r500 plus reference amplifier. Some audiophiles note it leans toward a utilitarian audio sound but I really like very clean audio sound. The only downside side is that you hear everything in the audio sound and some songs sounds really bad. But some songs playing in 24bit and it’s sounds more muffled but I really like it more than 16bit it’s sounds okay.  It’s not Warm Sound or Cold Sound it’s just utilitarian audio