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I changed up to suround sound to go with my DVD`s. By carefull selection of gear, the sound in normal stereo is exactly as good as top end hi-fi.
With multichannel DVD-Audio and SACD promised and the increasing pressure to add high-quality 5.1 audio to video systems, has the number of channels in your listening room increased?
Blended a home theater into the main rig utilizing a processor pass-through on the preamp. Using my older amps & speakers on hand (except the center-speaker investment), I was able to go multichannel with a relatively modest investment in a Sony TA-N900es A/V preamp. Haven't been very impressed by the multichannel audio discs I've purchased though!
I use to have the audio system in the living room and a minimal home theatre with surround in a small den. I got frustrated with separate systems because some components were better in the audio system, e.g., speakers and amps, and some better in the home theatre system, e.g., surround preamp. I combined both systems into one so all my listening is now done through a surround processor (Lexicon DC-1) and five speakers. The surround sound is subtle but it does add a presence. My only regret is that I had to move my main speakers to a less than optimal room location (closer to the front wall) to integrate the TV and center channel.
Yes, multichannel is here to stay. At this point, setting it up with taste and subtlety is more important than spending a lot of money on equipment that will soon be obsolete. I'm using an old Yamaha DSP-100 processor that has ambience channels for both the front and rear. The front ambience channels provide a complementary effect to the rear channels, which allows you to bypass the processor completely for the main front channels. So there is no downsidethe main left and right channels remain pristine and unadulterated by the processor, while the ambience channels (sometimes) extract a nice surround ambience.
Connected the TV output into the aux input of our 2 channel amp. Since the TV is stereo, put it into mono mode so the TV acts as a center channel. Main speakers are omnipolar and sound great from any position. Since our room is small, sattelite speakers are not missed. Nor is subwoofer. Great movie sound for the disposable liquid asset deprived.
I have been in the audio business for over 10 years. I design custom theater and automation systems for a living. I have always owned two-channel systems myself. I have rarely designed a system for home theater that rivals two-channel for music only. The theaters I have designed range from $50k to over $500k. Last November I made the change. I have been married for 9 months. My wife and I listen to music regularly, but spend most of our time watching movies. I own a system that is great for two-channel and perfect for theater. I'll put my system up against almost anybody's.
1-I'm not a video fan 2-5 good quality speakers is a lot of money. Perhaps, with the same amount you can buy 2 high quality speakers. 3-It seems to me artificial. In a live event you are in the hall not in the bandstage and you don't have any instruments behind you.
I have a high-end 2-channel system and a not-as-high-end video system. I intend to update the video system to surround in the near future (when I build my new entertainment center), but I will not change the high-end system. That may or may not be a great decision, but I just have so much fun listening that I don't want to mess with it. Movies, on the other hand, are something I can sit back with and let the gimmicks of the special effects take the driver's seat and go with the action. Somehow it's the same but different.
I have yet to hear music on a surround-sound system that created the slightest temptation to abandon two-channel. Given the enormous advances in CD technology in the last 15 years, however, it may be that someday surround-system technology will advance to the point that it will strike me as having more to offer than good-sounding explosions in action movies. I'm keeping my mind open, but I'm not holding my breath.
We have $12k tied up in a sound system in the living room that also has a $60 used Sony 13" TV in the corner. We have a 27" Sony in the sunroom hooked up to an early-'80s Kenwood receiver hooked to really small RadioShack speakers. With music, you can read and be involved in the music, if you really listen. TV does not require much thinking. It is great for movies, but I'd rather listen to music in the listening room.
Maintaining a balance between the *size* of the sound and the picture is important . Thus, spread the L and R fronts no more than 1.5 times the diagonal measure of the TV . Unless the screen is huge, this placement will not suit stereo listening ..., e.g., who wants Martin Logan SL3's 5 ft. apart for stereo ? The best is to do seperate systems ...