What are your Eureka Moments in this Hobby?


OK so I did steal this term form @lordmelton 

I wandered through midfi.  Surround speakers, 5.1 set ups, eventually getting to Classe Pre / Pro, Parasound 5 channel amp, Bowers and Wilkens Nautilus 800 series speakers and M / K Subs.  Then the best thing ever happened.  My Classe SSP-800 Pre / Pro broke for the second time.  So I ended up getting an Audionet Pre G-1 preamp.  Eureka!  What were your events?

fastfreight

Hearing for the first time Class A amplification on a humble Sugden A21SE integrated amp. That started me on a no-turning-back journey with Class A. Now with Pass Labs.

A couple euraka moments stand out for me:

1 - In 1986, after wasting too much time & money on terrible sounding speakers, I schemed to purchase a used pair Vandersteen’s then-flagship speaker, the Vandersteen 4. The first time I heard them (w/SS amping on the subs and tubes on top) completely blew my mind. I still have yet to hear the equal of those speakers in my house; and

2 - The first non-oversampling/multibit DAC I heard was the Audio GD NOS 19. After the longest burn-in imaginable (other users said 500 hrs’ burn-in was needed, and they were right), I finally heard a DAC that wasn’t delta/sigma based. Suddenly digital was musical, humane, easy on the ears and faithful to each music genre. My whole relationship with digital audio changed for the better, and 3 or 4 NOS DACs later, I still feel that way.

Hello @hifidream , very interesting.  Not sure what you mean about your DAC 

handling room control, time alignment, etc. 

I get the clocking aspect of digital, but do you mean using DSP to control room nodes etc?  I have always shied away from any DSP other than low pass filters on subs... Certainly I think Roon sounds better with all the processing turned off.

and hello @desktopguy !  Vandy 3 signatures (and their center and surrounds) were one of my first 'high end' buys, powered by the then best Denon Surround receiver with M and K subs.  I sold them before I ever had a chance to play them on good amplification.

 

and Hello @dwmb and welcome.  Surely class A is sweet; I would put those amps up against comparable Audionet amps and it would be interesting!

 

Thanks everyone for contributing!

The day i had heard how a straw put on a tubular volume with the right proportion can improve my system/room... (Helmholtz resonators)

 

After that, the day i discovered the location where i put it in the room matter ...

 

After that, the day i discovered a bunch of them together with different proportion modified the pressure zone of the room very much...

 

After that, the day i discovered how to help my ears/brain to perceive better the spatial cues by putting some mechanical crossfeed near each speakers drivers... I tuned them by ears...

 

After that the day i realised i can modify the ASW /LEV ratio at will ...

 But the most important day of eureka moment was when i read "Sound sources" by Akpan J. Essien a theoretical acoustic book . Once you understand acoustics it help.

 I can add all the electrical,mechanical eureka discoveries...

 

 My last Eureka was how to use DSP  possibilities with my system  when acoustics,electrical and mechanical working dimension were optimized...

None of my past  purchase compared to that was an eureka moment just a good or bad purchase....

if your eureka moment was a purchase, sorry it was probably not a eureka moment (understanding) but a relief from bad sound to lesser bad sound...

Optimization process deliver the optimal working of a system then is a warrant of satisfaction for any system at any price proportionate for sure with his design limits ...

 
 

 

 

@fastfreight

I use a Danville Signal dspNexus, which processes 8 channels at up to 48/192. It comes with software that lets you design the system using whatever crossover slopes you want.

I run my Magnepan 20.1s full range and use four large subwoofers to support the bottom end. I measure each speaker and the listening position with Room EQ Wizard, then feed those measurements into Multi-Sub Optimizer. From there, I build 8 biquad filters on each channel, which gives me a huge amount of control over response, phase, timing, and room modes. These are IIR filters, the dspNexus also can process FIR filters.

The payoff is big. Imaging is excellent, and the bass is tight, controlled, and very deep without sounding bloated or boomy. Since the dspNexus works as an active crossover, it goes straight into the amps, which then go straight into the speakers, so there are no passive crossovers in the signal path soaking up power. Each driver gets exactly what it should.

The amount of control you get with phase, amplitude, time delay, room correction, and master-clock timing is just on another level. There’s no way I could get this kind of performance trying to do it manually.