jimlintott
Master Poster
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2002
- Messages
- 2,893
This statement has me baffled.
So audio engineer types. Wouldn't increasing attack and decay essentially be changing the overall frequency of the music. Aren't these timing issues and changing them would actually change the playback timing? Isn't an amplifier's and speaker's ability to properly reproduce attack and decay really specced by their transient response and damping ability? Something that's probably a non-issue anymore in good amplifiers and is also pretty much gone in better speakers. This stuff is well understood. Right?
It seems to me that someone claiming a longer attack and decay has no idea what they are talking about.
First off I don't believe someone who listens to headphones knows what good bass really sounds like. While I can deal with terms like transparency and resolution this idea of lengthening the attack and the decay seems bizzarre.First impressions Statement for Harvesters and magic position of JuiceBar: More solid bass. More transparency and speed. Longer attack and decay. Greater dynamics. Higher resolution.
So audio engineer types. Wouldn't increasing attack and decay essentially be changing the overall frequency of the music. Aren't these timing issues and changing them would actually change the playback timing? Isn't an amplifier's and speaker's ability to properly reproduce attack and decay really specced by their transient response and damping ability? Something that's probably a non-issue anymore in good amplifiers and is also pretty much gone in better speakers. This stuff is well understood. Right?
It seems to me that someone claiming a longer attack and decay has no idea what they are talking about.
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