A friend that Mike L. introduced me to (we’ll just call him V) was showing me some changes to his stereo after Stirling Trayle came and did his magic. The M3's placement was without a doubt the best, by far. It was very apparent when they were locked in just right. He did a bunch of other stuff as well, but I can't recall everything. He's very exhaustive in the work he does, and it takes a few days. I suggesting checking out the link on his name for more information.
During our discussion I talked some about The Swarm from AudioKensis, and how it creates an immersion quality that nothing else has been able to do for me thus far, in the way that it works. Well an interest was sparked with V and awhile later when everything could be arranged between events in town, holidays, etc, James Romeyn arrived with a new set of subwoofers in black. Originally Duke (AudioKensis) was going to be producing them but the wait would have been longer. Duke works with James on different audio projects, attending shows, etc. He calls it the DEBRA system (Distributed-EQ Bass Reflex Array), and reshaped the boxes in a taller but slimmer profile that worked out really well. Duke flew in as well, and they integrated the system in. I was gone while that happened but the next day we got to hear the Gina speakers that were brought along for some extra fun to sample something else. I think they're an excellent evolution of Duke's work. I can see why Steve (WBF Steve) liked them at T.H.E. show, they're nice speakers! They also brought what they call "space generators" that are a new variation on something Duke has had in multiple iterations of speakers before, and I think the new ones show some promise with a little tweaking.
After the Gina demo we got back to the M3's. The system starts with an MSB-DAC to CH-L1 to CH-M1.1. I'd fill you in on the streaming details if I knew any of them, maybe the fellow who set it up could give details if he's registered here. While the M3's on their own are some very nice speakers, that "defy physics" (Duke's words), the bass vs the rest of the range has always been interesting. If you had a higher feedback amp it probably sounds smaller, as some have noted. But if you have a CH M1.1 amplifier you can adjust the global feedback 0-100%. Prior to the subwoofers addition, setting the GFB to 0-20% gave the best deep bass like you'd want. The more you climbed, the more the bass got tight but smaller. Climbing the GFB did some good things in other frequencies, but the bass was a ruling factor (I actually think tube amps without feedback could be a great match, too, VAC's sounded pretty good on them previously). Well once we started listening it was immediate that the immersion was next level. If we turned the sub amps off (they run off the CH L1, it has extra outputs) you start to feel like you're not "there" as much, and you're looking onward towards something that doesn’t involve you as much. Then you turn them back on, and you're much more involved with the experience. It might all be in the mind of the listener, but across the board everything seems better.
Just to give Duke and James a hard time, I will say I did a small tweak of their settings and the bass on one of my favorite bass tracks came in better and from there on out we didn't touch the subwoofer amplifier settings. We did however get to bump the GFB on the CH M1.1 up to 40% without suffering negative consequences and it gave a little extra life that actually generated some finger snapping by V. I think the M3's strengths besides bass bloom show a bit better that way, with a bit more GFB; so when they're augmented in the real low registries by a surprisingly affordable system you get a nice and whole presentation that wouldn't come from just swapping speakers.
The placement of them wasn't too difficult in this room. The pictures should show how non-invasive they were to the room.
Thanks to Duke and James for coming up.
During our discussion I talked some about The Swarm from AudioKensis, and how it creates an immersion quality that nothing else has been able to do for me thus far, in the way that it works. Well an interest was sparked with V and awhile later when everything could be arranged between events in town, holidays, etc, James Romeyn arrived with a new set of subwoofers in black. Originally Duke (AudioKensis) was going to be producing them but the wait would have been longer. Duke works with James on different audio projects, attending shows, etc. He calls it the DEBRA system (Distributed-EQ Bass Reflex Array), and reshaped the boxes in a taller but slimmer profile that worked out really well. Duke flew in as well, and they integrated the system in. I was gone while that happened but the next day we got to hear the Gina speakers that were brought along for some extra fun to sample something else. I think they're an excellent evolution of Duke's work. I can see why Steve (WBF Steve) liked them at T.H.E. show, they're nice speakers! They also brought what they call "space generators" that are a new variation on something Duke has had in multiple iterations of speakers before, and I think the new ones show some promise with a little tweaking.
After the Gina demo we got back to the M3's. The system starts with an MSB-DAC to CH-L1 to CH-M1.1. I'd fill you in on the streaming details if I knew any of them, maybe the fellow who set it up could give details if he's registered here. While the M3's on their own are some very nice speakers, that "defy physics" (Duke's words), the bass vs the rest of the range has always been interesting. If you had a higher feedback amp it probably sounds smaller, as some have noted. But if you have a CH M1.1 amplifier you can adjust the global feedback 0-100%. Prior to the subwoofers addition, setting the GFB to 0-20% gave the best deep bass like you'd want. The more you climbed, the more the bass got tight but smaller. Climbing the GFB did some good things in other frequencies, but the bass was a ruling factor (I actually think tube amps without feedback could be a great match, too, VAC's sounded pretty good on them previously). Well once we started listening it was immediate that the immersion was next level. If we turned the sub amps off (they run off the CH L1, it has extra outputs) you start to feel like you're not "there" as much, and you're looking onward towards something that doesn’t involve you as much. Then you turn them back on, and you're much more involved with the experience. It might all be in the mind of the listener, but across the board everything seems better.
Just to give Duke and James a hard time, I will say I did a small tweak of their settings and the bass on one of my favorite bass tracks came in better and from there on out we didn't touch the subwoofer amplifier settings. We did however get to bump the GFB on the CH M1.1 up to 40% without suffering negative consequences and it gave a little extra life that actually generated some finger snapping by V. I think the M3's strengths besides bass bloom show a bit better that way, with a bit more GFB; so when they're augmented in the real low registries by a surprisingly affordable system you get a nice and whole presentation that wouldn't come from just swapping speakers.
The placement of them wasn't too difficult in this room. The pictures should show how non-invasive they were to the room.
Thanks to Duke and James for coming up.
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