GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Ask Me" Archives

...to July 7, 2008

 

Ads and reviews

July 7, 2008

I read your publication regularly and enjoy it very much. But I've always wondered about your editorial independence from advertisers and how much I can trust some of your equipment reviews.

For example, the Audioengine A2 powered loudspeakers review in the current issue. On your cover page is a big spread ad by that company for this speaker. Then there is a glowing review of these speakers in your equipment section. What would have happened if your reviewer hated those speakers?

I don't want to assume anything, but could you please explain how you keep your advertising separate from editorial, if indeed you do?

Ken Sternberg

It’s a fair question, and one I’m happy to address. The cover page that you see is not an ad at all, but a graphic that we created displaying the products and music reviews in the July 1 update on GoodSound! Audioengine is not an advertiser. To see a list of who is, scroll down to the bottom of the page and you can see an index. But having said that, we have reviewed products from advertisers and given them very good reviews. You’ll find examples of companies that advertise and companies that don’t both receiving positive reviews in our pages. As a further example, look at the current "Opinion" article, “The Best So Far,” which lists the four most promising products of the year so far. Two are from advertisers and two aren’t. As they say, the proof is in the pudding.


Clipping

July 3, 2008

Hey there, stereo wizard! Wow, I have a friend who knows all about stereos and computers, but he is a moron compared to you and the vast expanse of knowledge you possess. I tend to ramble, but I will really try to keep this succinct. You explained what clipping was, but I really don't get it. All I know is that I love my loud rock’n’roll, and in the last six months or so I have noticed that even at a fairly low volumes the high-frequency notes will barely be audible, but then in a few seconds the music resumes to the louder volume. Is this clipping? The midrange and bass still sound great, considering I have a pair of Infinity SM152 speakers that I love. Each one has a 15" woofer, two 4” midrange drivers and only one 1" tweeter. They are heavy and 40" tall and I have owned them for over 20 years. Should I have the tweeters replaced or the voice coils or replace the piece-of-crap Yamaha Natural Sound A/V receiver I bought for $190 because it had been returned? I used to have a Sony STR-D2090 receiver that all of a sudden one day just would not turn on. My buddy said it was shot and the power amp in it was fried. The speakers would clip with that, but not nearly as often as with this Yamaha.

I guess I want your advice about the clipping, of course, but I would love your opinion on those Infinity speakers and the Sony receiver, which might be worth getting repaired. How much would that cost? At least that had a source to listen to those round, black vinyl things, which I have 5000 of. I heard that most receivers these days have no input for playing vinyl, so you have to buy a phono preamp, which I did.

Sorry for rambling. Any ideas would be awesome from such a stereo stud! I will write again, as I have a few other problems. Thanks so much and just to let you know, I am halfway through reading your archives. I don't know diddly about stereos, but I find it intriguing.

Kurt Johansen

There are two things going on here. One, your amplifier is clipping because it is underpowered and will not play loud rock music over very large loudspeakers. Basically, you need more power and can only get that through buying a dedicated power amplifier. Second, it sounds to me as if your tweeters in your speakers are blown. You’ll need to get these replaced. It is likely that these became damaged precisely because your amplifier was clipping and you are sending mucho distortion through your Infinity speakers (not a good thing). So there you have it from your resident "stereo stud." Get a new amp and new tweeters and rock on.


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