Can a tiny silver bowl affect music reproduction


I am speaking of the Ziplex one half inch wide silver bowls, but the same questions apply to the Synergistic Research ARTs.

About two weeks ago I had four audiophiles in my listening room. We were listening to the impact of the Tripoint Troy Signature. I was standing and noticed that one of the eleven Zilplexes in my room was laying flat on the three silver support rods on the wall. It was the one that is about midway down the left wall and about seven and a half feet off the floor. It is supposed to be at a 45ยบ angle facing the wall. As unobtrusively as possible I stepped on a foot stool that I leave there as this is a common happening and carefully inclined the bowl into a proper condition. I then returned to where I was standing.

Someone asked what did I just do, and I stated the above. They all were in disbelief about how it could have such an effect. I told them that Zilplex had been at CES and at the RMAF about a year or two ago, I repeatedly did their demonstration of removing all eleven Zilplexes. Always those in the audience said exactly what my four friends had said.

Having stumbled onto these a couple of years ago, I said that the inventor and owner really didn't have an explanation for the effect that it was all a trial and error process, which, of course, had taken countless hours. Synergistic Research also has a comparable bowl device, which Ted Denny attributes to his hear Tibetan monks and their bowls. There are of course Tibetan bowls. Syn. Res. ARTs are bigger than the Zilplexes but neither is the size of typical Tibetan bowls.

Tibetan bowls, of course, resonate when struck or rubbed at the rim. SR ARTs ring when knocked together. Zilplex don't ring. I asked Zilplex about this and was told they ring but at a frequency we cannot hear. My question is why would ringing bowls located variously in a room, greatly improve the apparent size of the rooms and the realism of the reproduced music?

All I can say is that they do, and I have heard no real explanation.
tbg

Showing 17 responses by mapman

No doubt.

I listened to several bells . They all sounded different. Some good, some much less so.
The inventor is clueless?

Hey, at least I presented some reference material to base a theory on.

Clueless inventors are a strange bunch.
Every thing in a room affects acoustics. The only question is to what extent and if significant, and also value in that most anything marketed to audiophiles is likely to carry a premium price for whatever it may or may not do.
Rumor has it those things are really bells, and, well probably also ring like a bell, which most audiophiles normally frown upon.
" Maybe??"

I'd be willing to bet that the new piece of furniture results in different room acoustics than prior, and would not surprise me at all if audible to a careful listener.
I am a big believer in the principles of yoga (and martial arts) and practice several times a week.

I might have to buy a tibetian bowl. Worst case, for $30 bucks, it makes for an interesting conversation piece.
I may bbuy a pair of $30 tibetian bowls, set them square center on top of my OHMs, and see/listen what happens.

OHMs are uniquely designed to enable placing objects on them and having a better than average chance of hearing something different.

If nothing good happens, well, like I said at least I have a nice pair of conversation pieces and yoga aids.
"what I heard before me was the room where she played, not the ten foot wide and eight foot high room in which I was sitting"

That's pretty much what I hear already in both of my OHM rooms currently.

But one can always aspire to do even better though I would agree. At this point, no doubt I think I have to be willing to think out of the box a bit to accomplish that in any real meaningful way.

We'll see...
"I suspect, however, that your bowls are just excited at way too low a frequency. LOL!"

Well, you just never know now do you?

Maybe how it works for Yogis is the key. An audio engineer who has never practiced Yoga may have no clue!

"Is that bowls or bowels? HA (I'm bad:)"

Well, look, I may be crazy (who in this hobby is not to some extent) but not sure about that one.

Good Karma can have many positive effects though. Ya never know.....

I have one Yoga teacher who rings a bell during "OM" chant at the end of class (he is my most hardcore instructor) and I have noticed that the chant seems to resonate more holographically that way in that the harmonics do seem to align and hold ones attention better. No joke!!!! Fascinating stuff.....
"Mapman, why would you place them on top of the OHMs. What would you hope to prove? Have you not been following the discussion with respect to the proper locations for the singing bowls? "

Geoff, I suppose I'm just a rebel at heart...

Is there a blueprint for how to use them best with Walsh driver based omni-directional speakers like the OHMS?

They might work best the same with these speakers as others, but my experience over the years has been that OHMs and omnis aare different beasts acoustically and have to be addressed as such.

Listening to the room and not the speakers IS always the key with OHMs though, so that's a good omen. I'm very used to doing that and advising others who listen to do the same as well.

Don't worry...I have a plan. If I put them on there and they do not work, then I will...remove them and put them somewhere else where I can admire them at a minimum even if they do nothing for me audiophile-wise.
My basic assumption would be that sound pressure levels would largely determine the magnitude of the bell ringing effect of gadgets like these bowls. Placing bowl on top of OHMs would be interesting to try, if nothing else. SPLs above teh Walsh driver are probably greater than most speakers designs but still much lower than horizontal plane, where most of the sound is directed.

IT would be a unique configuration and test.

Otherwise, I could see where prime reflection points on rear wall relative to primary listening position might be the best spot in most cases and still relevant even with omnis/OHMs.

OHMs + tibetian bowls.......truly going perhaps where no man has gone before?

Or maybe best to keep such things and stereos apart from each other for use on the more typical terms of each?

Dunno. When I scap up an extra $60 bucks for a pair of bowls, I'll provide an update.
"Mapman, so you are going for a shot in the dark. I would rather depend on Zilplexe's efforts to deal with all of this. "

Maybe, but its so much more fun this way.

I'll read up on Zilplex though just to be as well informed as possible.

Bowls are not top of my list of things to buy yet. I have a wife and two kids (one in college, one still to go) to deal with.

Fathers Day is coming up though, so maybe I'll put in a request.

I just like the idea of having them. If they can help my sound, that's icing on the cake, but frankly, I am very happy with the sounds I currently get through various channels around my home, not to mention headphones.
" Does limiting production somehow make the product more exclusive?"

To put it simply, yes.
I was in Greenwich Village recently and stumbled on a nice pair of Tibetian bowls in a yoga shop there. Almost pulled the trigger.......
" In fact, I'll go out on a limb and say that empty beer bottles in the rooms at CES are one reason the sound at the show sucks so consistently."

One reason. Probably just after beard lengths in importance.