GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Ask Me" Archives

...to December 31, 2004

 

Receiver recommendation

December 30, 2004

We were recently robbed of some stereo equipment, including an NAD C370 amplifier. It was matched with two Paradigm Atoms and a Paradigm PDR-10 subwoofer, and it also powered two OS6 outdoor speakers. The speakers still remain, and we need to replace the amp with another integrated amp or receiver. We do not have any need for home theater. I always felt like the small Paradigm speakers were overpowered by that particular NAD unit. What can you suggest that will deliver good sound affordably?

Teri

I'd get the NAD T743 receiver. I recently wrote about it in my "Surrounded" column on SoundStage! and I just loved it. It offers a healthy 50W x 5 that'll power those Paradigms well, and it retails for $699. I'm sure you can find a better price if you shop around, too. It should last for years and you won't be spending a ton of money on bells and whistles you don't need.


Music CDs on new HTIB not sounding too good

December 28, 2004

I really appreciate your website. If only I could search the Q&A archives, then I wouldn't have to pester you with my problem!

I just bought an Onkyo HT-S770 -- a big, mean Home Theater In a Box. I've hooked it up to my PS2, Xbox, Gamecube, and PC, after a few days of hunting down the right wires and the right information. Movies sound terrific, but I wanted to use this new system of mine for music as well, and I have yet to have a satisfying experience playing my CDs on it.

I've tried every source possible for playing my CDs -- the Xbox and PS2 over optical wire, and my PC over 5.1 analog wire (using the analog outputs on my SB Audigy LS for the rear, center, and subwoofer channels).

My best experience ever with audio over speakers was standing in front of my old Aiwa shelf system, with the speakers at head level, two-and-a-half feet apart. The sound would hit my ears just perfectly so that the sound surrounded me, and I felt like I was in the room in which the music was recorded. It's been about a decade since I bought that system, and this brand-new 6.1 surround-sound system can't even compete with that experience.

What am I doing wrong? How do I listen to two-channel audio on my fancy new system?

Mike

You've definitely learned one of the most important lessons in home audio: speaker placement is critical to good sound. As you've learned, being centrally located between the speakers and not too far off the tweeters' vertical axis is key with most speakers. Therefore, getting those speakers in the right location is the obvious place to start experimenting with your new system. This will involve working with the distance from each speaker to each wall, the distance to your listening seat, the toe-in (angle of the front baffle in relation to you) and the speaker height. Experimenting with their location will be helpful, so move 'em around until the sound is closer to your liking. Here's a GoodSound! "How To" to help: "The Best Things in Life Are Free Speaker Placement."

Assuming you have the satellites placed properly, I suspect your problem with music CDs is subwoofer orientation. Integrating a subwoofer with small satellites can be challenging. You'll need to work with the subwoofer placement just as with the speakers, along with any adjustments such as crossover frequency and phase. Try this GoodSound! "How To" for more detailed instructions: "Bass in Place: Setting Up Your Subwoofer." It may take a few hours of work, but getting those speakers and subwoofer located optimally will pay off in better sound.


Appreciates the GoodSound! approach

December 27, 2004

I am a regular reader of GoodSound!, which is one of my favorite websites because of its honesty. Your review of the JoLida 302B integrated amp in 2002 was one of the reasons I now use tubes. My system includes an NAD T750 A/V receiver, a Pioneer DV-563A universal player (because of your recommendation, too) and a Parasound HCA1000A amp, so you can see my choice of affordable, good-sounding gear. I really think that even when a $10,000 amplifier sounds better than a $1000 one, the sonic difference is not ten times better. Despite my love of music I believe that spending tons of money on audio is insane because there are many other things in life that are much more important. Just think, for example, of your health; without it, can you really enjoy your music?

Anyway, I decided to buy a JoLida integrated a month ago, not the 302B but the 202A, and I found it marvelous. I think it could be interesting if you review the JoLida 202A, just as more proof that you don't need to spend a fortune to get into a string quartet or a jazz group in a heavenly way; and that is, by the way, part of your reviewing philosophy that I really like. Thanks.

Manuel

Thank you. Stories like yours prove that we're on the right track. It sounds as if you're enjoying your system and your music, and regardless of cost, that's priceless.


EMF distortion

December 22, 2004

First of all, great website.

I currently have a Yamaha RXV-450. My TV is about one foot away from the receiver. When I put the music fairly loud, I get intermittent lines across my TV set. Do you know what can be causing this and if there is a solution?

Sergio

It's not your receiver, but your speakers. What you are experiencing is distortion caused by EMF -- an electro-magnetic field. According to Less EMF, "Conventional speakers incorporate both a permanent magnet and an AC magnetic field to produce sound. The field from the permanent magnet is present whether the speaker is active or not. The AC magnetic field is only present when the speaker is activated, and varies in frequency and strength with the pitch and volume of the sound produced. The magnetic field from the two sources can deflect the electron beam in a cathode ray tube monitor (TV) causing distortion of the image, sometimes called jitter (and possible damage to the equipment)." So you need to move or shield those speakers.


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