Steve, Congratulations on your new speakers. It's great to see your enthusiasm and excitement.
I wish you many hours of fun and exciting listening.
I wish you many hours of fun and exciting listening.
Thank you. I have to admit thatI am enjoying this new speaker. Every day has become a new learning experience for meSteve, Congratulations on your new speakers. It's great to see your enthusiasm and excitement.
I wish you many hours of fun and exciting listening.
Well, that's why they call it the "sweet spot" and not sweet spots.Years ago Gary Koh visited with his wife and daughter and every few songs I suggested someone else sit in the chair. After Gary left he sent me an email that I thought always rang true. He said that the shortcoming was the one sweet spot. Listening he said should provide enjoyment for many listeners regardless of where they are sitting and he designs speakers to provide that off axis enjoyment. I have never forgotten that email.
I hear you and your'e correct that for most of the time it is one ass in the sweet spot. Having said that with the Wilson there remained only one sweet spot and sadly almost everyone who visited were taller than me and so they were out of focus and did not get the satisfaction which I got. In the last few years of my Wilson saga, Damon Von Schweikert and Leif Swanson helped create an algorithm which did not exist in the Wilson manual. The toe in of each speaker was neutralized and all upper modules were changed dramatically such that their positioning had the drivers perfectly aligned. My chair was moved forward to a true near field such that I was inside the triangle. Wilson recommends a ratio of 1.0-1.25. My ratio was 0.88 and in all the years I owned the speaker this change provided for me and my guests the greatest listening pleaserWell, that's why they call it the "sweet spot" and not sweet spots.
Personally, and for many (most?) others that I visit, most of us do our listening solo, so having a wide sweet spot is meaningless for the single digit % times folks come over to listen.
Vivids also have a very wide sweet spot with linear off - axis dispersion, so it's an added benefit but not a priority for me. Enjoy!
And finally the biggest take away for me after 35 years is that unlike Wilson where everything is set up like a laser directed to the ear height and sitting distance from the speaker. If your ass isn’t in the sweet spot and the ear height is set for someone else then your listening experience will be far from accurate. This is not the case with the Zellaton. The off axis dispersion is such that listening enjoyment need not be where my one chair is
Thanks Bruce. Enjoy. For me these past few weeks have been a true learning experienceThis is probably the biggest reason I moved from Wilson... Like you, I went through many years of Wilson products. I ended up with speakers that exhibit great off-axis performance and wouldn't have it any other way. Congrats!
This is probably the biggest reason I moved from Wilson... Like you, I went through many years of Wilson products. I ended up with speakers that exhibit great off-axis performance and wouldn't have it any other way. Congrats!
You seem to be echoing what I have been saying and one of the reasons why I decided to switch speakers. I’m shocked by how good my speakers sound from anywhere in my roomSo serious music listening is principally a one person hobby? Do most folks think of it in that manner or am I misunderstanding? I must be an outlier since I rarely sat in the "sweet spot" and never thought of it from that perspective. IMHO, seems "upside down" and anti-social compared to a typical live listening experience. Also counter-productive for growing the hobby and fostering a larger acceptance by the general public. Not a criticism. Just an observation.
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