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2007-12-15 16:04:35 · 3 answers · asked by canada 1 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

3 answers

The previous answers are very good in my mind.

Speakers are 'user-dependant'. Buy from a reputable dealer that understands this. Decide for yourself which are sonically superior to your ears, then discuss with the dealer where your going to be installing them to ensure good placement and that the speakers will be capable of working as well in your home as they do at the store.

Then install them right away, burn them in according to the manual, and then placement test them. If they don't sound as good as you thought they would then return them for an exchange and try another set out.

2007-12-16 01:36:32 · answer #1 · answered by x x 4 · 0 1

Hi. You are the only person who can decide. You have to listen to both of them to decide which "sound" you prefer.If you go by someone's opinion, you may be disappointed,even though they mean well. All loudspeakers add their own "sound" (colouration) to the sound they are reproducing.We all have preferences in sound quality when it comes to buying speakers. A properly designed and built loudspeaker should reproduce the original music exactly as it was performed.This is why there are no "Jazz Speakers",or "Rock Speakers",or "Classical Speakers" - just poor,good,better,and great speakers.Of the 400 plus brands of speakers available there are only 20 or so really good speaker manufacturers.As different as good speakers can sound there are two things that all good speakers have in common. One is a seamless sound from the very low bass to the very highest highs (you don't hear the individual drivers).The other is the ability to reproduce voices well.All good speakers do these two things.Speakers that have a neutral type sound are usually referred to as an accurate speaker. They do not emphasise or de-emphasise any part of there frequency range and are usually chosen for accurate music reproduction. Most British loudspeakers fall into this category.and are usually more expensive.

2007-12-16 01:33:18 · answer #2 · answered by ROBERT P 7 · 1 1

While all of the components of an audio system are important, your speakers are the ones that actually deliver the sound to your ears. Every speaker has different sonic characteristics, every room has different acoustic properties, and everyone's ears hear sound a little differently. Let your own ears be the final judge.

2007-12-16 09:04:24 · answer #3 · answered by mike1084 3 · 0 0

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