Michael Fremer's system


Do you agree with his choice ? What would you change ?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H07NpWk_Xf8
inna

Showing 8 responses by geoffkait

Please bear with me a second. Not only is it bad for the sound to have SO MANY records in the room - or CDs, or books, any media - but it has NOTHING to do with absorption of Acoustic Waves or any such thing. The odd thing is that some of us have known about this for a very long time, at least 20 years, yet the average Joe Audiophile never heard of it. That’s probably why I have Advanced Audio Concepts in my name. 😃 It’s a Peter Belt (RIP) thing. Stereophile magazine even has two of Peter Belt’s products on their recommended components list. Come on, people! Wake up and smell the coffee! ☕️

“The great sound was in the room the whole time. You just couldn’t hear it properly.”

Machina Dynamica
Advanced Audio Concepts
But that’s not the argument. The argument is whether you can get good sound in a small room with a huge number of LPs and other clutter. I say you can’t. It’s the old entropy problem beaming down at you, in spades. ♠️
Feng shui is really nothing more than Information Fields with fancy Chinese words. Sound Quality is a function of Entropy. I.e., the less “clutter” (e.g., books, record albums and CDs) the better the sound.

Does he have the new Continuum Obsideon turntable? Or the older one.