'lateral' move - help


Here's my situation:

I started with a HT. Nakamichi AV10 receiver, NHT 2.5i mains, NHT VS2.4 centre, NHT 1.3a rears. Rotel rcd971 transport, MSB link DACIII half nelson.

Wanted better sound for music. HT is secondary.
Decided to go from HT to strictly two-channel. Sold the Nak. Bought a Unison Rearch Unico. Smoother sound, yes. More detailed? not really. Airy? AGain, not really.

I figured it must be my speakers. Sold em all. Bought a pair of StudioLab Reference 1's - MUCH different speaker than the NHT's...NHT = 1" metal tweeter, 6.5" inch midbass, 8" woofer. StudioLab Ref 1's - 3/4" soft dome tweeter, 4.5" bass driver.

When auditioning the StudioLabs in the store, they were being driven by a Jolida 30w/ch hybrid (JD301?) and source was a cambridge cd player. Not the most serious stuff, but 'good' gear.

With this gear, the sound of the StudioLabs was very open and airy - breathy, even. Very fast, crisp and clean. They lacked the ultimate in bass, but that's the price i was willing to pay for that type of higher fidelity sound. Ordered a pair. Just got em yesterday. Thought I would be infinitely pleased.

Now the sad part. I do realize that speakers in general need breaking in. And i know how significant this break in can be. But, I'm just not getting the clarity and airiness that i'm looking for. Further, there is a room resonance at a certain bass frequency...the room loads at that frequency and the bass becomes boomy and one note-y. This is most noticeable with dance music. I attribute this strictly to the room, which i KNOW to be very poor acoustically.

The fact of the matter is, I thought these speakers would significantly outperform my old NHT's in terms of airiness, clarity and dimensionality. I was wrong.

Is it possible that once the new speakers are fully broken in, the sense of 'air' will present itself? Or should i resign myself to the possible fact that the speakers are just not a good match for what is running them? Or is it possible that my room, in conjunction with the 'bass loading' characteristic has a way of 'killing the airiness' of a speaker?

Also, would changing tubes in the Unico help at all?

I'm not sure what to do or where to go at this point. I lost a lot of money in selling my old gear, and frankly, i'm not happy about it.

Cables are Audioquest type 4 and interconnects are MIT terminator 2???...digital cable from transport to dac is Kimber D60 silver.

The room is about 11.5 x 14, system on the long wall (has to be) Hardwood floor. Area carpet. Wall carpet. At times, there's a bed that extends into the room (which definitely interferes with the imaging), although this bed is put into couch form when listening critically.

any ideas at what i'm lacking to get this 'air'?

hellllp!!!
loose

Showing 3 responses by zaikesman

You just got the speakers yesterday? Don't even think about this stuff 'til you've got at least a couple of weeks' worth of regular use on them. Try putting a CD on repeat or using a tuner and leave them playing music while you're out of the house, if you can, to speed break-in. Come back to the thread after the speakers have over 100 hours on them and give us an update.
Yes, well, I can't of course promise you that the speakers will improve greatly, or that you'll ultimately like them - just that they *will* change, and that it's way too early to know yet. Take an aspirin and call us next month. :-)
The posts about speaker location and room treatment are potentially valuable, but I'd still break-in the speakers first before investing a lot time with set-up, since you don't want to have to do it over again after the speakers have changed their sound. If you've ever noticed in magazine reviews, reviewers will often place new speakers in a second system and feed them a continuous signal for a couple of weeks prior to attempting to set them up for serious auditioning. Limit your variables to one thing at a time - first things first - and definitely don't rush to 'upgrade' or change any other system components or wires until the speakers are done breaking-in, as you run the risk of throwing your money even further in the wrong direction, *especially* if you wind up still not liking these speakers, in which case it will highly questionable whether it is wise to begin trying to compensate for their sound through other sysytem changes.

That question will need careful evaluation should that scenario come to pass, but it simply cannot be predictably or profitably addressed before the new speakers are A) thoroughly broken-in, and B) gotten used-to via extensive auditioning after condition "A" has been satisfied. Rushing into additional issues prematurely would be the surest way to compound the problem and stray further afield.