I found this graph on An Inconvenient Truth About Room Acoustics (The Myth Of The Flat Frequency Response) and likely to be typical of a high end system.
- ...
- 20 posts total
- 20 posts total
I found this graph on An Inconvenient Truth About Room Acoustics (The Myth Of The Flat Frequency Response) and likely to be typical of a high end system. |
Yes, that to me wouldn’t be very listenable, to hot in the high frequencies. I prefer a curve like Katz described, fairly flat to 1khz then a slope to 20khz very similar to the Harman curve without the bass boost. Of course it's also speaker dependent above 500hz it's mainly the speaker in control , you need a good speaker that measures flat in an anechoic chamber. |
Even if we accept 110% is used as an alternative to "absolutely 100%" the statement is wrong as sound quality is far more than just frequency response. |