The magic of outdoor listening


I tend to keep one system I can pull outdoors when I am in the mood the freedom from room colorations is an amazing thing. Being outside listening to a great system playing wonderful music is magic. I have a bike race by my home and if the weather is nice many times I'm out jamming I have had large groups of cyclists stop 50 yards from my home to enjoy my music. Last year I has using a giant pair of RCA front horns with a full range in it this year going with a community leviathan system with radial. I pull out a tube amp when I jam outside. When I retire I plan on putting out a permanent outdoor horn system so it is ready to go when I am. Sitting still seated centered in a room all alone is enjoyable at times but also kind of tragic I am happy I have options. Maybe consider the outdoors as one of your listening spaces.

128x128johnk

I am glad to see this thread , I always try to convey to folks how amazing outdoor listening is. I have a system on my outdoor deck where I sit with my back to the house and facing back of my property with lots of trees and a big field, beautiful nature with birds singing all around.. and bookshelf speakers firing back at me 11’ apart in an equilateral triangle perched ear level on railing on granite slabs for stability and isolation.. with 10” subwoofer and 100 watt amp in an outdoor cabinet behind me next to the power outlet ,, and so the only reflection for the bookshelf speakers is the homes exterior wall behind me, so no ceiling or sidewalls and no wall behind speakers. It’s a very budget oriented economical system and the sound is absolutely incredible.. Soooo magically spacious and natural sounding.. I spend entire summer out there and rarely listen to indoor systems until weather changes forcing me back indoors ..if you haven’t ever done so and your able ,, set something up outdoors maybe similar to as I’ve described and I’m confident you’ll be shocked.. I’m literally astonished at the sound.. this year I’m pulling my Elacs outside for upgrade .. enjoy the music!

Okay, guys.  Don't try this at home.  Unless, of course, you love bass, pyrotechnics, and the shocking look of bewilderment on the faces of your guests.

This is a project I did a while back.  The concept was to use the bass vents from buried subwoofers to interact with the flames of an outdoor wood-burning fire pit.

Details:  Buried 3 high performance subwoofers in custom PVC enclosures.  Vent the boxes via 3" automotive steel exhaust tubing to the fire pit.  Cut hole in bottom of fire pit.  Make custom heavy gauge perforated plate to contain ashes. Using our enclosure design software, it was determined that the air speed thru the ports was 76MPH.

Result:  An extremely active display of music & fire that was a crowd pleasure and actually produced decent outdoor bass.  I called it the Man Pit.  At 76MPH windspeed, it does go through firewood pretty quickly.  So, have ample supply on hand.

Enjoy!!! 

I worked for Magnolia for a short while, and IME Sonance speaker’s with their outdoor subwoofer is an awesome value. They run incredible sales a few times a year that cut the price in half, and Magnolia employees will usually be forthcoming in when those sale periods will be. IME running an outdoor sub or two makes all the difference because monitors sound thin and tinny outdoors without them.  

Count me among the curmudgeons. If you have no neighbors close enough to be bothered then knock yourself out, otherwise the lack of consideration for others you exhibit by blasting your music outdoors is simply staggering. I have some outdoor Kefs on a screened-in porch and I was careful how I placed them so as not to disturb others, and my house is in the middle of a five-acre lot, partially surrounded by other similarly sized lots.

You have no idea what is going on with your neighbors. There could be health issues that would make this sort of thing unbearable (i.e. chronic migraines), but above all you simply do not have the right to destroy the peace and quiet of those around you. The law is on your neighbors side. If racking up numerous disturbing the peace summons' or noise ordinance violations didn't deter you, then the courts would be the next logical step and it would be a very easy case to prove.