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I know the main reason I want it is for music surround. I want to be enveloped. Since I am installing rear speakers and a 5-channel amp, I might as well use it for movie surround too.
With the proposed DVD-Audio format comes the opportunity for multiple channels of high-quality sound. But would you even consider adding more speakers to your two-channel system?
¡Ay hombres! There goes the pocketbook! I just got a new Sony DVD player with the trick 96kHz/24-bit D/As in my Sony(s)/Pioneer/NAD(s)/PSB(s) AC-3 surround audio/video system. I must say the AC-3 with movies is one heck of a fun experience. I haven't yet bought any high-bit-rate-encoded DVDs, but I sure plan to in the near future. What I'm afraid of is that I'll like them and then I'll have to deal with the issue of the cost of getting three more channels of muy expen$ivo tube amps and costly, British-made minimonitors. Oh my Gawd! I forgot about the cables! I already put about $1k into AudioQuest/Monster Cable cables in the video system---can you image what it would cost to do it in true high-end? Does Kimber Kable sell stock?
If it takes two more speakers to put me in the center of the soundstage, why not? Audio started out with mono, then stereo, so two-speaker systems evolving to four doesn't seem drastic to me. Imagine yourself being THERE. That's what we're after, isn't it?
I'm using, and am completely satisfied with, a pair of Martin-Logan SL3s. Getting them properly positioned in my room was a major accomplishment. I hear sounds from all the well-known surround positions with just the two (including behind my head). Trying to integrate even another pair of speakers would be a nightmare, as well as pointless, in my situation.
Was it only 15 years ago when the audio industry promised us "perfect sound forever" with CDs, and yet, the early CD discs and players sounded harsh and unmusical for the most part. Both the digital hardware and software improved in the 1990s but it took a almost a decade for the teething troubles to be worked out. I'm afraid that similar "growing pains" will plague the audio DVD format as well. For now, I will definitely sit back and wait. Not only will it give me time to save more money for this new technology when it comes out, but the prices will come down and a wider selection of products will appear on the market.
Surround sound has been promised in various formats for many years. From discrete quad to Dolby Surround, the industry has had difficulty establishing a standard. Once again, surround sound is in the midst of a standards battle. Will it be AC3 or DTS? As a consumer, I don't want to take a chance that one or both of these surround formats is obsolete in a few years.
In fact, why use two speakers at all? I use only ONE SPEAKER. That way, I can buy a really BIG speaker and a really BIG amplifier, the bridge the amplifier. Sound stupid? Try it sometime. Maybe when I get more money I will be able to afford a second speaker, but more are really out of the question.
Multiple-channel recordings will require multiple speakers. Doesn't this introduce the possibility of increased interaction between the listening room and the added loudspeakers? Perhaps if digital room-equalization devices become commonplace in the high-end audio scene, then the advantages of multiple channels of high-quality audio will become apparent.
When I go to a jazz club, I hear music coming from one direction; some music reflects from the acoustical setup in the room, but a live band, the ultimate system, doesn't have speakers in the back of the club for improved sound.
Additional channels for additional speakers should help the speaker companies---they'll have more to hype. I wonder if there'll be a push to upgrade the surround speakers separately from the two main speakers, or will it be all or nothing?
Have too much invested in current system. Been listening to two channel all my life. Every time I hear a multi-channel set up it sounds unatural to my ear. I'll stick with what I have as the key to sonic bliss has been conquered. ie controling room induced effects.
My computer currently has a pair of rear left and right channels and a sub-woofer to accompany my front left and right channels. I am currently in the market for a new system that I can have a center, sub-woofer, rear surround- you know the works.
While I understand the idea behind surround/quadrophonic sound, I'm just not with it. The bottom line is that when I go to see a band, they're playing in FRONT of me! If the goal is to try to re-create a musical moment as it happened, I can't help but feel we're going in the wrong direction with this idea. It's cheesy. It reeks of the "Club/Stadium/Cathdral" settings on a reciever.