Originally Posted by bikeman
Are you being serious? If so, why those receivers?
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Originally Posted by bikeman
Are you being serious? If so, why those receivers?
Occasionally, but I try to avoid it.Originally Posted by Grayson73
I thought the answered that question. Guess not.Originally Posted by Grayson73
David
seriously, i'd like to know what electronics are used in developing/testing the ascend speakers, too. most of the "entry level" AV equipment seems to have horrendous sound quality, so it would be nice to know what supposedly sounds best with ascend. i notice a lot of harman kardon stuff on the products page, is that what dave mostly uses, HK?
Haha. I didn't think so, but wanted to make sure.Originally Posted by bikeman
The only reason I thought that you could have been serious is that the Ascends probably sound good with almost any receiver.
To my understanding, it isn't consumer grade electronics, but true engineering equipment.....just like any electronics engineer might use....signal generators, occilliscopes, etc., and he has mentioned before at least some of the stuff he uses to take measurements.Originally Posted by starcycle
The fact that they are designed not to be hard on amplification is the reason they sound good with many types of receivers/amplifiers.
-curtis
Interesting. What would you consider "entry level?"Originally Posted by starcycle
David
Even so, I would imagine he tested with consumer grade electronics in order to find the sound quality he was looking for via music CDs and so forth.Originally Posted by curtis
anything i've heard in the $0-500 range so far, including onkyo, pioneer, yamaha, and panasonic. on its own, the panasonic (xr-55) sounded the best of the bunch, but even that wasn't stellar. barely listenable, i would say, maybe okay just for movies. i shelled out $100 more for a yamaha with pre-outs, just so i could run it through a 2-channel receiver and get acceptable sound. on its own, it's completely unlistenable, like the other budget receivers -- thin, flat, harsh "cardboard" kind of sound. i can't imagine any of the other brands in that price range sound much better. i haven't heard anything in higher ranges yet, but based on what i have heard, i'd guess you'd have to go to $800-1000 minimum to get any decent SQ with integrated A/V receivers, if it's possible at all without using good amps or going all separates.Originally Posted by bikeman
Last edited by starcycle; 04-18-2006 at 08:46 AM.
right, that's more of what i was wondering.Originally Posted by Grayson73
LOL I thought you *were* serious too...esp. seeing how I've heard that Dr. Hsu uses a cheap Onkyo receiver with his subs.Originally Posted by bikeman