Over the years I'd heard that it wasn't a good idea to have other speakers or guitar or bass combo amps in your audio listening room. The theory was that the speakers of the instrument amps could absorb the sound waves of your stereo, sucking the dynamics out of the music, or conversely, absorb the waves into the cabinet and then release them into the room, smearing the sound and overloading the room with the resonant frequencies of the speaker cabinets.
After living for 3 years with an Eden 2x10 3.6 cu. ft. bass combo amp in my living room, I decided to put the theory to the test and wheeled the amp out to another room and fired up the stereo to see if I heard an improvement. Eureka! The improvement in sound exceeded my most optimistic expectations. It was as if I'd made a $1,000 upgrade at least, whether in room treatments, better speakers, or better amp and speakers.
Basically, it squelched my suspicion that I'd bought too little speaker for my listening area. Gone was the congestion and upper bass overload I had been hearing at medium-high volumes. Tthe entire presentation at every volume became much more clear and musical. Presentation was more linear with no noticeable lumps, and the soundstage became 3-dimensional as I'd never heard it in my room before. Now I can let this system rip as I couldn't before. I've been playing large scale orchestral and big band all week and hearing very familiar pieces with new levels of dynamics, smoothness, low level detail, and 3-dimensional imaging. There's a new ease and relaxation to the music that I hadn't had before, and when things get loud the music still stays clear. I'm finding that these speakers are even better than I'd realized. At their current price of $800/pair they are a stone cold bargain. Given that these used to sell for $2500 i can confidently say you simply can't do better at that price. I also did a sanity check. I was playing a Count Basie record of small band swing--a septet. I brought my wife in to listen and she immediately noticed that she could hear the musicians' breaths behind the saxes and horns they were blowing. She'd never noticed it before.
I know that many of you have your amps and guitars in the same room as your audio gear. That's what I was doing too, and I get a lot of good out of playing along with recordings. It stands to reason that the effect of removing a guitar or bass amp will vary according to the size of the cab and speaker array relative to the room it's in as well as its position in the room. You may not hear a difference removing a Fender Champ or Princeton. But if it's a 2x12, half stack, or bass combo placed along the wall, I suspect it will consistently thwart efforts to tune the room. It may also depend on the cab configuration. I had a 2x12 open back guitar amp for a long time and didn't have the problem I did with the bass amp with enclosed but ported cab. YMMV.
Still, given the amount of improvement I got just by schlepping the combo amp out of the room, I recommend you try it. You may find it useful when you want to do some critical listening or playback for mixdown.
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JohnnyB
Over the years I'd heard that it wasn't a good idea to have other speakers or guitar or bass combo amps in your audio listening room. The theory was that the speakers of the instrument amps could absorb the sound waves of your stereo, sucking the dynamics out of the music, or conversely, absorb the waves into the cabinet and then release them into the room, smearing the sound and overloading the room with the resonant frequencies of the speaker cabinets.
After living for 3 years with an Eden 2x10 3.6 cu. ft. bass combo amp in my living room, I decided to put the theory to the test and wheeled the amp out to another room and fired up the stereo to see if I heard an improvement. Eureka! The improvement in sound exceeded my most optimistic expectations. It was as if I'd made a $1,000 upgrade at least, whether in room treatments, better speakers, or better amp and speakers.
Basically, it squelched my suspicion that I'd bought too little speaker for my listening area. Gone was the congestion and upper bass overload I had been hearing at medium-high volumes. Tthe entire presentation at every volume became much more clear and musical. Presentation was more linear with no noticeable lumps, and the soundstage became 3-dimensional as I'd never heard it in my room before. Now I can let this system rip as I couldn't before. I've been playing large scale orchestral and big band all week and hearing very familiar pieces with new levels of dynamics, smoothness, low level detail, and 3-dimensional imaging. There's a new ease and relaxation to the music that I hadn't had before, and when things get loud the music still stays clear. I'm finding that these speakers are even better than I'd realized. At their current price of $800/pair they are a stone cold bargain. Given that these used to sell for $2500 i can confidently say you simply can't do better at that price. I also did a sanity check. I was playing a Count Basie record of small band swing--a septet. I brought my wife in to listen and she immediately noticed that she could hear the musicians' breaths behind the saxes and horns they were blowing. She'd never noticed it before.
I know that many of you have your amps and guitars in the same room as your audio gear. That's what I was doing too, and I get a lot of good out of playing along with recordings. It stands to reason that the effect of removing a guitar or bass amp will vary according to the size of the cab and speaker array relative to the room it's in as well as its position in the room. You may not hear a difference removing a Fender Champ or Princeton. But if it's a 2x12, half stack, or bass combo placed along the wall, I suspect it will consistently thwart efforts to tune the room. It may also depend on the cab configuration. I had a 2x12 open back guitar amp for a long time and didn't have the problem I did with the bass amp with enclosed but ported cab. YMMV.
Still, given the amount of improvement I got just by schlepping the combo amp out of the room, I recommend you try it. You may find it useful when you want to do some critical listening or playback for mixdown.
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