Does listening fatigue go away???


Hello everyone,

Just want to ask everyone here an honest question. Is listening fatigue sometimes associated with getting used to a "presentation" coming from your setup. In addition, is the burn period people talk about also associated with the above?

The reason I ask is that I currently own a pair of Quad 12L Active speakers that were being feed directly by a Squeezebox Touch. Unfortunately this setup only had a digital volume control which really affected low level listening. My solution was to add an external means of volume control with the Warpspeed optocoupler which uses LDR. I have received it this week and it has made a huge difference in almost every facet of the sound, soundstage, speed, bass, imagining, clarity and authority without adding any coloration. It also dead quiet and I have spooked out my wife a few times when the music suddenly comes on. In fact the only issue I have been having is listening fatigue after about an hour which I did not have before.

My question is it just me getting used to the new sound or something with the warpspeed or mogami wire? How can I pinpoint the problem? I also am planning to get an EE minimax plus soon, you think that will alleviate the problem?

Thanks for you advice.
daimbert
Different things cause listening fatigue for different people. There's no universal answer as to what's causing your's.

People get carried away with cables. I definitely hear differences in them, but none that ever transformed a system by any means. Mogami makes very good stuff, so it's not like you've got something butchering the signal, emphasizing or cutting something, etc.

I think there's a little bit of burn in in amps and digital sources, but very little IMO. If it doesn't sound right after a day or two, I don't think it ever will. I'm a firm believer in warming up stuff though. My old Theta DAC would sound awful when it was cold. Very harsh and distorted in the highs. If it was unplugged for more than a few days (no power button), it would take almost a full day to sound right again. I've never heard it to that extent with any other component. My integrated amp (Bryston B60) takes about 45 minutes of playing from a cold start for the magic to happen. Once the knobs are warm, the music flows.

I'd say leave your gear on for a day or two without turning it off. It doesn't need to play constantly.

It could also very well be that the increased clarity from the preamp has shown you a flaw elsewhere in the system.

Have you played around with the volume level of the speakers, or more importantly the Squeezebox? Perhaps one of them is causing an imbalance. Not sure if the Squeezebox outputs bit perfect at 100% volume or somewhere less than that. If its less than that, it could be adding bits to go louder. Alternatively, perhaps the Quads are being a bit overdriven by the preamp, and the Quads need to be turned down just a tad.

Last thought... Have you played with speaker placement? Perhaps the increased clarity has shown a flaw in that.

Just some thoughts. I'd start with fiddling around with the volume adjustments. If all else fails, borrow some gear to swap in and out.
Thanks for the information everyone. To be honest, I kind of assumed that my low hours of use was an issue. What I was more curious to know it the "break in" period and "listening fatigue" that people, myself included, complain about are one and the same. That is, that you mind and ears need an adjustment period to get used to the sonic presentation of certain new components or systems.
Hi

For me reducing listening fatigue was quite an ordeal.

Here was the list of problems. I hope this can help with your battle with listening fatigue.

1) Lack of room treatment. My listening space had lots of bare walls.

2) Tweeter height on my speakers at the time. I put them on stands that put the tweeters right at my ear level. I did this because of aesthetics. I thought the speakers should be taller. The tweeters and speakers in general were supposed to be 6 inches below ear height.

3) The toe-in angle of my speakers was to sharp. I had them pointing at my ears. I had to decrease the toe-in by a bit.

4) Speaker cables weren't a match for my system. Even after over 400 hours of burn-in my ears would hurt on some recordings even after I handled some of the placement issues with the speakers.

5) Amp. It had a lot of gain and was too revealing. It was airy and gave me a lot of detail that I wanted but the cables and other issues the detail and harshness got too much.

It was a long journey but my listening fatigue is gone now but I had to make sweeping changes.

Good luck
You could have put on Charles Mingus' 'hog callin' Blues', and solved the whole thing much quicker and cheaper.