Quote:Per Raven's comment on the sibilance, maybe that is what makes the WE speaker wires so listenable. I think the diffusion helps, but the wire has a smooth melodic sound. I feared you guys were going to come in and pronounce it too laid back.
Honestly, the WE wire was the *last* thing on my mind yesterday - so that tells me they are just fine. I kinda wish we had swapped in Zen Styx at some point - to me, silver enhances the high end a little bit, and I like that detail...but maybe as you've said, you've "got too much silver"?
Quote:Also, I liked the bullpen idea with the on-deck amp warming up. Maybe a Zenfest idea??
Steve does this already with his amps - he's usually got two or more on deck, and in the shop where his Mac is he's got space for a couple more amps. In fact, seeing your little shelf setup totally reminded me of Steve's shop.
Quote:BTW, the white diffusers in the pictures are actually the inverse of the styro diffuser on my back wall (not shown in any pics). These are what those fractal diffusers come packaged in. Its the original styro block they are cut from, reused as a shipping container. Anyway, Raven said he took a saw to his and produced inverse diffusers, so I did the same. I haven't painted them yet because I was just trying them out this weekend. I like what I hear, but will try them in a couple of different positions. I wonder if you could model what they are doing?
Yeah, I kinda spaced out and forgot to take photos of the rear wall. Between not wanting to stand in the sound field with others listening, and getting frustrated with that ground loop issue on the DS - I just totally forgot.
To clarify a little bit, here is my fractal diffusers, and the "inverse" that they are shipped in. They are CNC wire cut for precision, and literally shipped in their own carcas. :) I asked the shop that made these, if they've taken measurements of the inverse to see if they'd perform well in any capacity, and they said it never occurred to them (sigh). That said, they are concave, and that's usually very bad for a listening room. But I think with some clever trimming and even more clever placement, that they can have a place in the listening room.

Another thing I think I kind of glazed over in my eagerness to get some sleep - one thing that blew Jester's mind - when we played Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, he said that with his eyes closed, he was hearing the room in which the recording was made in front of him - not the room he was in. *that's* when I know Palomino's got his diffusers working well.

When we later had sound palpably taking up space in the room, that's when I knew this room was on the verge of something really magical. This room is approaching what Steve had in his old house off Adams Street that I heard all those years ago.
Man I need a dedicated room...