What is FAST?


I keep reading about "fast" components from reviewers and some audiophiles - speakers, subs, CD players and most recently an amplifier.

What does it mean in real life?
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Showing 1 response by shadorne

I agree with all the above. Fast would not exist if there were not a lot of "slow" or warm gear around. So like Good is only good becuase of Evil - so it is for fast.

Essentially it is abnissue from the combination of dynamics, transient response, damping and frequency response presentation.

Over damped or critically damped speaker designs will not tend to sound slow as they do not add any oscillations to the signal (they follow the drive signal and stop moving when power is removed) The problem with these designs is that overdamped has a low bass response and needs EQ boosting to get a flat frequency response. Critical Damping is often selected as it has a nice flat frequency response and gentle roll off, however it too has an early roll off in the bass. (Unfortunately underdamped designs are extremely popular because they are easy to drive and produce copious bass - these tend to sound "slow" or whatsome might describe as "punchier" and you do get teh advantage of copious bass in a small box)

Dynamics are what stress the amplifier and speaker system. (Transducers extend to the limits of their linear travel and voice coils get hot and lose sensitivity to the drive signal, all while more power is demanded from the amp) When the system is asked to do more than it can handle in a linear fashion you either get clipping (harsh sound in SS, or warm harmonics in the case of tubes) or you get a dull distorted sound from the speaker itself, as it compresses the sound... in either case, briefly the dynamics are not properly reproduced and you have a "slow" sound and at high levels a noticeably distorted sound.

Transient response. This is linked to damping but also to driver time alignment (phase if you like)...a well time aligned system will not sound "slow" or "fast" ...just correct. Remember that the "slap" in the kick drum is at 4 to 5 Khz whilst the "bottom" sound of the kick drum is between 80 and 100 Hz. Alignment between the arrival of these signals is important if you are to correctly perceive all forms of percussion (it is much less relevant for non percussive instruments...however - be warned even the piano is a percussive instrument and will not sound correct on a "slow" system)

Frequency Response - taking the same example as above of a kick drum. If you attenuate the 4 to 5 Khz region then your kick drum will sound less "fast" or snappy - less "slap". Conversely if you augment this region then the kick drum will sound "fast".

In essence this means that through microphone placement, type of microphone (tube amplfied or not), tuning of musical instruments, the manner in which instruments are played, the use of an EQ/compressors in the mixing session, a "fast" or "slow" sound can be created on the source material. Your speaker frequency response will also influence this.

If you have a "slow" system then nearly everything will sound slow or slower...tracks will sound more alike than on a "fast" system becuase everything is colored towards "slow".

If you have a "fast" system then individual tracks will tend to reveal their individual charater more accutely => that which was intended to sound "slow" will do so and that which was mixed to sound "fast" may even sound "clinical".

Example: Steely Dan sounds nicest on a slightly "slower" system as a "fast" system will tend to reveal that just a wee bit too much audio engineering is going on...and you can hear it....the sound is dry, mechanical, clinical and almost hygenic to the point of being "germ-free" (drums on some tracks were edited and a "perfect" drum pasted in for every actual drum sound such that it just repeats and repeats identically (like an electronic drum machine but with a human controlling the timing). They used Yamaha NS-10's as nearfields in those days...so perhaps it sounds perfect on a speaker of that kind of quality. Nevertheless it sounds good on nearly any speaker, even "fast" ones.

Example: He's got all the Whisky - John Martyn will tend to sound slow on any system....huge resonant plodding bass and slurred lyrics to add to the intended effect.