speakers were made to be used.Quick question for all of you.
What is your main output - studio monitors, headphones...
Do you think there could be adverse affects on my monitors for the continual jamming through them? Basically am I going to lower the lifespan by alway using them as my main output?
Anything mechanical will break down with more use... Speakers are mechanical.Quick question for all of you.
What is your main output - studio monitors, headphones...
Do you think there could be adverse affects on my monitors for the continual jamming through them? Basically am I going to lower the lifespan by alway using them as my main output?
Do the Opals still rock so hard that nothing currently in production is in their league?If my Event Opals were to die I'm not sure what I'd replace them with.
If my Event Opals were to die I'm not sure what I'd replace them with.
I don't have definitive information on that either way, but I've never seen any evidence that was sufficient to convince me that speaker break-in is real.Some people actually believe well broken in speakers, monitors, headphones, sound better? Not sure myself.
what's interesting is that many people say a speaker is done "breaking in" after it's been playing music at volume in a room for a while... while they've been in that room for most or all of that time.I don't have definitive information on that either way, but I've never seen any evidence that was sufficient to convince me that speaker break-in is real.
Here's what it would take to convince me... a double-blind test with a dozen identical speakers: half of them brand-new, and half of them with 1000 hours of "break-in." And a dozen test subjects. Speakers would be played randomly, multiple times, in identical or near-identical locations in the room. The test subjects would then have to say which speakers were broken in and which ones were brand-new.
I don't have definitive information on that either way, but I've never seen any evidence that was sufficient to convince me that speaker break-in is real.
Here's what it would take to convince me... a double-blind test with a dozen identical speakers: half of them brand-new, and half of them with 1000 hours of "break-in." And a dozen test subjects. Speakers would be played randomly, multiple times, in identical or near-identical locations in the room. The test subjects would then have to say which speakers were broken in and which ones were brand-new.
This.what's interesting is that many people say a speaker is done "breaking in" after it's been playing music at volume in a room for a while... while they've been in that room for most or all of that time.
their ears probably just got broken in, if anything.
This guy gets it.That almost sounds scientific. Certainly doesn't belong in a guitar forum where mystical lore supersedes everything.
their ears probably just got broken in, if anything.