Difference in speaker sounds
|
Joined: Sep 2021
Posts: 17
frequent flier
|
OP
frequent flier
Joined: Sep 2021
Posts: 17 |
Other than volume levels and bass levels/amounts, how much difference in sound is there really between Axiom speakers? I'm talking crispness, clarity, other variables. I'm an old guy and maybe my ears are just gone from concerts, war, etc. I've had most every Axiom speaker over the years from the M2 to the M80 and I don't know that I can really tell any difference as mentioned.
I just traded a pair of M5s in for a pair of M80s. I'm wondering what differences I will notice. Some people say they can tell major differences between speakers from the same brand, different brands, etc. Just curios what others think.
Last edited by Mojak; 09/26/24 03:12 AM.
|
|
|
Re: Difference in speaker sounds
|
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,494 Likes: 116
shareholder in the making
|
shareholder in the making
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,494 Likes: 116 |
I have at least one post somewhere on here that explains the differences in all the v4 speakers. They all present similar soundstage and imaging but as you move up in size, the soundstage eexpands and imaging is higher resolution - almost akin to moving from 480p, to 720, 1080, 2K, 4K in video land.
Moving from M80v2 to M5HP (v4) was a bigger upgrade for me than moving to active LFRs. The M80v2 to M5HP move showed me how much Axiom had advanced in its understanding of the spinorama. M80v2 were akin to 480p; M5s were 1080p.
House of the Rising Sone Out in the mid or far field Dedicated mid-woofers are over-rated
|
|
|
Re: Difference in speaker sounds
|
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 313 Likes: 28
devotee
|
devotee
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 313 Likes: 28 |
It could also be that having more bass makes the higher frequencies sound better. Towers go deeper, making everything else sound more convincing. I've thrown a sub alongside deeply flawed bookshelf speakers, and it does a good job of temporarily hiding those flaws. I've found that you get good timbre matching by sticking with the same brand within the same generation or model series. It really only matters if you're going multichannel and you want your center or surround speakers to sound similar to the stereo pair. Timbre matching just means that different loudspeakers are equally flawed.
Author of "Status 101: How To Keep Up In A World That Keeps Score While Buying Into Buying Less"
|
|
|
Re: Difference in speaker sounds
|
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 319 Likes: 12
devotee
|
devotee
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 319 Likes: 12 |
I have M2s, M3s, M5s, and M80s and I think the larger M80 sounds better due to ... (I'm not sure how to put this) ... improved harmonic/resonance.
I also tried the LFR660s and didn't like them as much as the M80s - BUT after I returned them I found that I had my (also new) pre-amp set wrong. I'd love to try them again, I think I'd like them more.
As for timbre, the only speaker I wouldn't put in a combined system is the M3. They're great for a standalone bedroom/office system, but I think they sound a little more bass-heavy than the others.
|
|
|
Forums16
Topics24,972
Posts442,631
Members15,638
|
Most Online2,699 Aug 8th, 2024
|
|
0 members (),
715
guests, and
1
robot. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|
|