"I Trust My Ears"


Do you? Can you? Should you?

I don’t. The darn things try to trick me all the time!

Seriously, our ears are passive sensors. They forward sonic data to our brains. Ears don’t know if the data in question represents a child crying, a Chopin prelude, or a cow dropping a cowpie. That’s our brains’ job to figure out.

Similarly, our brains decide whether A sounds better than B, whether a component sounds phenomenal, etc.

So, "I trust my ears" should really be "I trust my brains".

And that has a different ring to it, doesn’t it?

 

 

devinplombier

Showing 3 responses by kofibaffour

@mazian you don't have deficient hearing in the problem areas which is mostly the lower treble region between 2 and 6kHz unless you can't hear to 6kHz.

 

But yes B&W newer iterations have always sounded stringent, overly bitey to me and the data doesn't lie about that

 

So preferring bright speakers because of high frequency hearing loss isn't a bulletproof phenomenon. I know many people who don't like B&W, Martin Logan and many speaker brands that have overly zealous presentation in the upper registers

@devinplombier someone gets it. Instead of blindly doing whack-a-mole with your speaker preferences. You demo something that intrigues you, look and pray it has a competent and full spin data, not some measly on axis FR. Then try to demo other speakers within that form of presentation so you can narrow it down.

That's how I ended up with my setup.

 

Also shunning measurements when the room is basically the biggest denominator is weird to me. Cos if you have a dedicated space and just use vibes to set it up. It will sound good but you'd be bottlenecking yourself not optimising the setup with help of some RTA