Thank you! I don't think my MacBook Pro did that justice but very nice to see/hear.
Question for everyone here:
Can larger speakers such as this produce the same pinpoint imaging of a smaller speaker?
(if set up correctly, including the room)
Would a singer (or a violin etc) sound any taller, wider, etc on a larger speaker?
Would the larger speaker sound any less intimate playing, for example, a small jazz or classical ensemble?
depends on the room, a Magico would sound terrible at 20 square meters at high volume, a Geithain not promised. A loudspeaker has to fit the room, so you can't generalize that big speakers are always better in my opinion.I don't mean bad, that's what I learned after 30 years of HiFi
Not sure anyone would put a pair of M9s in a 20 Sq. meter room. OR even think about it. I surely would not sell someone M9s if they only had a 20 sq. ft room available. I have to live with the customers that purchase M9s, so a lot goes into looking at a proposed room for an M9 installation.
My room which is quite small at a bit under 40 Sq. meters for an M9 installation will be a tight squeeze. Although I am determined to make them work to MY satisfaction in my room as I have a few interested M9 customers with similar size rooms so we are going to give it a whirl.
The Dallas and Magico M9 installations are closer to 50 Sq. Meters so no issues in those rooms.
I can point you to numerous threads on WBF with spurious tangential topics, it's called a conversation. Should they also be moved? IMO:
A) Is it really detracting from the volume of traffic specific to the OP and M9s? - no
B) Is it relevant to audio and speakers - yes
C) Is the conversation becoming personal and in any way truly deleterious to the main topic - no.
IMO this is supposed to be an educational, fruitful dialogue; roads have many forks worthy of exploring.
I can point you to numerous threads on WBF with spurious tangential topics, it's called a conversation. Should they also be moved? IMO:
A) Is it really detracting from the volume of traffic specific to the OP and M9s? - no
B) Is it relevant to audio and speakers - yes
C) Is the conversation becoming personal and in any way truly deleterious to the main topic - no.
IMO this is supposed to be an educational, fruitful dialogue; roads have many forks worthy of exploring.
Not sure anyone would put a pair of M9s in a 20 Sq. meter room. OR even think about it. I surely would not sell someone M9s if they only had a 20 sq. ft room available. I have to live with the customers that purchase M9s, so a lot goes into looking at a proposed room for an M9 installation.
My room which is quite small at a bit under 40 Sq. meters for an M9 installation will be a tight squeeze. Although I am determined to make them work to MY satisfaction in my room as I have a few interested M9 customers with similar size rooms so we are going to give it a whirl.
The Dallas and Magico M9 installations are closer to 50 Sq. Meters so no issues in those rooms.
Not sure anyone would put a pair of M9s in a 20 Sq. meter room. OR even think about it. I surely would not sell someone M9s if they only had a 20 sq. ft room available. I have to live with the customers that purchase M9s, so a lot goes into looking at a proposed room for an M9 installation.
My room which is quite small at a bit under 40 Sq. meters for an M9 installation will be a tight squeeze. Although I am determined to make them work to MY satisfaction in my room as I have a few interested M9 customers with similar size rooms so we are going to give it a whirl.
The Dallas and Magico M9 installations are closer to 50 Sq. Meters so no issues in those rooms.
Me too I'm hoping to learn a lot about the installation that happens in Dallas prior to my install which will follow. Chris (RLR/Dallas) will have a more appropriate size room vs my room for the M9s so they should actually be very similar to Alon's set up in Hayward. I say that because 90% (Extreme server, Pilium pre/amps, cabling) will all be the same. Only the DACs are different. The rooms are very similar in size as well.
I can point you to numerous threads on WBF with spurious tangential topics, it's called a conversation. Should they also be moved? IMO:
A) Is it really detracting from the volume of traffic specific to the OP and M9s? - no
B) Is it relevant to audio and speakers - yes
C) Is the conversation becoming personal and in any way truly deleterious to the main topic - no.
IMO this is supposed to be an educational, fruitful dialogue; roads have many forks worthy of exploring.
Not sure anyone would put a pair of M9s in a 20 Sq. meter room. OR even think about it. I surely would not sell someone M9s if they only had a 20 sq. ft room available. I have to live with the customers that purchase M9s, so a lot goes into looking at a proposed room for an M9 installation.
My room which is quite small at a bit under 40 Sq. meters for an M9 installation will be a tight squeeze. Although I am determined to make them work to MY satisfaction in my room as I have a few interested M9 customers with similar size rooms so we are going to give it a whirl.
The Dallas and Magico M9 installations are closer to 50 Sq. Meters so no issues in those rooms.
You also need height. Probably 2 feet or so minimum, better 3 feet or more, between uppermost driver and ceiling. I have seen big Wilson XVX speaker installations with the speakers almost going up to the ceiling. That's asking for trouble.
You also need height. Probably 2 feet or so minimum, better 3 feet or more, between uppermost driver and ceiling. I have seen big Wilson XVX speaker installations with the speakers almost going up to the ceiling. That's asking for trouble.
My thoughts exactly seeing the first owner's room. Those speakers need room. They look about as big as the Arrakis which, having heard many times really breath well with 12' ceilings and in a ~650 sq ft room. The sound stage is reproduced from the floor to the ceiling depending on source material. I'm fairly certain the 12' ceiling partially enables this. Of course, I still wouldn't turn down a chance to hear the M9s in a vertically challenged room
Sorry guys i must apologize for bringing this up .
It was never my intention to discriminate against small speakers whatsoever
Speakers are all equal and each of them fully deserve their place .
You also need height. Probably 2 feet or so minimum, better 3 feet or more, between uppermost driver and ceiling. I have seen big Wilson XVX speaker installations with the speakers almost going up to the ceiling. That's asking for trouble.
My thoughts exactly seeing the first owner's room. Those speakers need room. They look about as big as the Arrakis which, having heard many times really breath well with 12' ceilings and in a ~650 sq ft room. The sound stage is reproduced from the floor to the ceiling depending on source material. I'm fairly certain the 12' ceiling partially enables this. Of course, I still wouldn't turn down a chance to hear the M9s in a vertically challenged room
Sure, if someone is building a room for large speakers then you build out 11' foot 12' ceilings. Alon has done this in Hayward, we are also doing this in Dallas.
BUT I am installing the M9s in my place, which only has 10' ceilings because there are a LOT of customers that only have 9' or 10' ceilings. I want to see how they work. I've also installed 10+ Goldmund systems that were 77" high. In one case the customer had an Ocean home and the listening room was in the basement with 84" inch high ceilings. He wanted to try it, so we did it.
He kept the speakers for 15 years and listened to them every day and loved them. All kinds of music. Would they sound better in a larger room, SURE. Did he have a larger room where he wanted to listen, no. Did he understand all of this prior to installation, yes. He had owned the large IRS in the past and understood large speaker installation.
I've installed hundreds of speakers in the last 50 years. I would say maybe 25% had ideal room dimensions. A LOT of customers that have the $$$ and want larger speakers only have X amount of room. They still want large speakers. They understand that they won't sound the same or as good as if they had a larger room, BUT they still can be made to sound REALLY GOOD and acceptable for them to enjoy listening to music.
Sorry guys i must apologize for bringing this up .
It was never my intention to discriminate against small speakers whatsoever
Speakers are all equal and each of them fully deserve their place .
Your political correctness joke is hilarious, but even among "size groups" not all speakers are equal, neither in quality nor actual size.
Also, not all rooms are equal. it is equally problematic to put too big speakers into a too small room as it is trying to fill a large room with too small speakers.
Many audiophiles have too large speakers for their rooms.
In addition, while a large speaker may have more potential, it also may take a lot of effort to have it play at its potential, or at least reasonably close to it. If it does not, it may actually sound worse, way worse, than a smaller speaker.
There are measurements of the loudspeaker frequency response, the impulse response or the waterfall diagram. From this you can very well draw conclusions for the installation in the room and the size of the room.magico are probably excellent speakers in the right room, can be adapted with active xover.