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E1 Isolation Base – Removed noise in a Night and Day Comparison for a turntable

We just got this HRS E1 Isolation platform in for people to hear the noise reduction in more modest systems. (This just happens to be the only system that we could try it on 🙂 )

A customer friend of ours used our platform and heard the noise drop out on his $1600 Project turntable. Dramatic noise drop.  He was blown away.  So I had to test it out for myself, the next day when I got into work. 

Jaw dropping is how I describe my personal observation in the noise reduction here on the MT5 turntable when I loaded the Eric Clapton – Unplugged album.

As soon as I dropped the needle down on “Hey Hey” with the platform, you actually didn’t hear the main noise of needle drop you normally would. 

Then Ed Masterson, played “Signe” the 1st song on the album to hear the noise from the crowd clapping in the concert. The soundstage of clapping went from stadium wide, not because that was the actual width of the soundstage, but more because it was one aspect of the recording that perhaps was not as coherent as the instrumental  (felt like it) and opened the reproduction to a very distinct width and natural soundstage. (When I looked up the background on his “Unplugged” album, I discovered Unplugged is a 1992 album by Eric Clapton, recorded at Bray Studios, England in front of an audience for the MTV Unplugged television series.)

The noise floor just dropped out, the high quality recording become distinctly more transparent, airy, natural and so many other terms of clarity I could use.

A Note I’d like to Add; Before I wrote this blog post about my own personal experience. Having been an Audiophile for less than 3 years, I wanted to read from another person’s perspective in regards to noise reduction and specifically if I could find, an article on an isolation platform. In my search I found one from the best, a very interesting and relevant point made by Robert Harley, Editor in Chief of The Absolute Sound Magazine, (and author of the book I am reading called “The Complete Guide To High-End Audio“) in an article he shared in 2015 called ‘Critical Mass Systems Maxxum Amplifier Stand Disappearing Act’.  I quote Mr. Harley below from the article:

“In my editorial in Issue 246 (“The Law of Accelerating Returns”) I suggested that the goal of assembling the most realistic-sounding audio system is best realized by investing in products that are demonstrably more transparent and resolving.

All too often, audiophiles swap components only to trade one set of colorations for a different, perhaps initially appealing, set of colorations. Years of such “upgrades” don’t bring you closer to musical realism in the long run. It’s better to spend your money on components or accessories that improve the sound without any sonic tradeoffs.”

During our test, Ed made the comment that being an electrical engineer, this platform made more Engineering sense than other noise reduction/isolation products or methods, because it was based on applying mechanical noise reduction. So, I stayed the course on my post here.

My summary: It was very much a Night and Day difference.  Two turntables were tested.  The first one was a $1600 Project turntable and the second was a $7000 one.  The same friend/customer Dave heard both. And from what I understood him to say, was they both had about the same results. An $1100 isolation platform by HRS did this.  Very simple test. Amazing results.  I encourage you to come in and hear what I did.

The gear used:

The McIntosh MC462 Solid State Amplifer, the McIntosh C2600 2-Channel Vacuum Tube Preamplifier, the McIntosh MT5 2-Channel Precision Turntable, and Sonus Faber Olympica Nova III Floorstander Speakers with the REL sub-base woofers turned off. (because one happened to sell the other day) 

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Not Everyone Will Go Big…

Let’s face it, we’d all like to have that better than live concert sound of our “Transporter” main listening/demo room here at Audible Images AV, but with most, it just isn’t going to happen.

Some of us with a more humble background if you will, enjoy listening to Ultra High End gear (at our showroom), yet we can be very entertained with a modest system that sounds good cranked loud or as background music, but most just do not plan to have a pair of $38,000 mono block Dan D’Agostino Progression Amplifiers to drive our front speakers 🙂

‘Sounds Better’ is an addition to our logo as of late because Ed is constantly making the point about how the Music itself should just engage all your attention right there in your chair. And how Mass Market & Big Box has made visual and functional bells and whistles persuade the general public to buy their widget, but in contrast Ed hammers home, Sound quality, this is what causes you to melt into your listening chair, solo or with your other half. If the music can sweep away all distractions, and let you become submerged in listening for hours on end, then you know you chose the right gear.

So here’s where my personal and modest choices come into play. What system would I like to work my way into right now, and then expand over the next five years? What we’re gonna spend to start, is $3800 right up front. What questions do you ask when you are ready to begin the quest for your system?

Questions I asked myself for a starting point.

  • Is your listening room a dedicated room like a spare bedroom , small office type setting?
  • Or will it be a large open area shared architectural type setting?
  • What budget would you need to follow with your round one system?
  • Do you have other gear that you want it to work with? IF so, what gear?
  • How loud will you want to crank it up?
  • How will you place the system, on a piece of furniture or will you rack it?
  • Are you thinking two channel now with or without a TV?
  • If with a TV, then you’re probably thinking a home theater setup in the future, yes?
  • What type of listening experience is absolutely necessary for you to be happy right off the bat?
  • Are you married, and if so, will this also be a family and/or children listening room?
  • What about Acoustic treatment for the room, so that whatever you buy, it sounds pretty good in that room?

My new system room & gear description after the questions.

The room will be a spare bedroom type room, around 11 by 12 feet with vaulted ceilings. See note below for those of you not sure what my vaulted means, otherwise skip to the next paragraph.

Wiki: “A true “vaulted ceiling” generally depicts different wall heights on either side of the sloping ceiling, in contrast with a “cathedral ceiling”, which usually has equal wall heights on both sides.”

Okay continuing on with my new system description: The system will for now rest on a cabinet to start, and we’re going with a multi channel receiver that has built in audio streaming for music, and a pair of modest 3 way floorstander speakers. For now, I have to skip the room treatments/acoustics, but there will be installed floor carpet. A 43 inch TV will be installed already.

The proposed system, is a really excellent sounding receiver from NAD Electronics, the NAD T 777 V3 A/V Surround Sound Receiver with a pair of PSB X2T Tower Speakers. (Note: the little black piece to the right of the receiver is a streaming Node 2i from Bluesound (sister company of NAD, but it’s actually not needed, the T777 already has the same streaming pre-built inside with a modular card, I just didn’t want to have to download the updates and set it up, so I just used a digital cable and created an external streaming source 🙂 )

NAD T777 with PSB X2T Tower gallery

Details about the Gear and Why I chose it.

Why NAD receivers and amplifiers? THIS IS WHY shopping at an Audiophile owned small business makes sense over internet bargain hunting. (I personally see how Audiophile friends just pop into our showroom all the time, simply to ask Ed’s opinions, listen to our latest gear or music and seek his knowledge, and also just to talk the hobby)

First of all, my boss and friend Ed Masterson has over 20 years of Audiophile experience, product knowledge, reviewing gear for online magazines and he is very critical about quality of gear and manufacturer support. Here is a quote below from Ed that is also seen on our “Brands” page.

As you study the brands we carry please keep in mind that we have spent years studying the market looking for companies that consistently produce high quality products that perform near to or at the top of their class. Our consideration also includes the quality of support and general passion of its owners for our hobby.

Back to our details about the Gear…

The NAD T777 has a nice amount of power combined with really excellent sound for a modest priced amplifier/7.1 channel receiver at $2500. (this isn’t a review persay, but I overemphasize that the T777 has a really detailed beautiful sound) It delivers the dynamic head room you want for those songs that can make some drastic shifts in base. For example the song “Deviance” off the “Meowingtons Hax Tour Trax by Various Artist, 2011 release. It has some really crazy synthesizer intro that builds to a semi scary crescendo and then transitions into a pounding kick drum and other percussion along with some really loud mid-range synthesizer sounds. Even the NAD 758 sounds great, however I chose the T777 to test for this new system because it does provide 160 Watts at 8 Ohm. And 80 watts by 7 channel for theater. So here is an excellent piece, to start off 2 channel, and then expand into an awesome 7 channel system on down the road.

I played quite a few tracks via the Bluesound streaming and using Roon and Tidal. I share the reason why that track was played. These are just some of the tracks I played, though I did play quite a few more than the following list:

  • Fade to Black – Dire Straits (bass, guitar)
  • Come Away with Me – Norah Jones (vocals, piano, soundstage)
  • Flight of the Cosmic Hippo – Bela Fleck & the Flecktones (heavy bass, bango)
  • Electrified II – Yello (crazy bass, synthesizer, full dynamic range)
  • Nature Boy – Lisa Ekdahl, Peter Nordahl Trio (vocals, acoustic bass guitar)
  • Lush Life – Kate Reid (vocals, piano)
  • Hotel California – Hell Freezes Over – Eagles (guitar intro, kick drum)

The system sounds just excellent, and for a small to medium size room, it will crank about as loud as you could want. Below I clipped an excerpt from a review on the T777, and then close with a summary that includes the recommended upgrades that I would do next, when the budget permits.

Review about the T777 V3 Receiver

Hometheaterreview.com has a very good review of the T777. The only minuses they seem to mention are theater and setup related points, none of which are the reason why we offer NAD products. The Sound of NAD amplifiers is why Ed keeps offering them in our showroom for modest high performance systems.

After mentioning a couple minuses in their review (in regards to bells & whistles), I quote what Dennis Burger says in the May 28, 2018 review, “Frankly, I didn’t miss it, especially given how delightful this receiver sounds in plain old stereo mode, with no DSP tinkering or channel expansion. Imaging was just flawless, and the handling of the acoustic guitar bits around three and a half minutes into the track was simply sumptuous. The timbre was spot on. Transient response was unimpeachable. The breathy, almost mournful vocals of singer Thomas Dybdahl just hung right there, right in the air in front of you, with wonderful tonal balance, delicious warmth, utter clarity, and in their perfect place depth-wise in the mix. “

What did he say about how the receiver in theater mode sounded like? I quote from the same article, from the 2nd page here in hometheaterreview.com:

“In the movie Star Wars: Episode VIII–The Last Jedi on UHD Blu-ray. From the opening blasts of John Williams’ iconic theme, even with the volume knob pegged all the way to the right, it’s obvious that the receiver still has headroom to spare. The score here sounded absolutely triumphant, with rich midrange and sparkling detail.

Fast-forward past the opening crawl, and we come to a sequence that honestly had me hovering my finger over the volume knob, just in case: a succession of star destroyers come screaming out of hyperspace, followed by a massive dreadnought doing the same. This was my twelfth viewing of the film (my fourth on UHD Blu-ray), so I knew what was coming: a sound effect that sort of evokes a nuclear bomb exploding in reverse. Much to my delight, the T 777 V3 delivered the sounds without flinching, cranking out every ounce of dynamic wallop and transient aural brake-slamming with ease.”

End quote.

Summary

Come in to hear this modest yet high performance starter system of the T777 V3 Receiver Amplifier with streaming ($2500) plus the PSB X2T Tower floorstander 3 way speakers ($1299/pair) Once you hear it in our two channel mode mode set up and love the sound, then before you leave to go home to think about it, we’ll give you a demo you won’t forget with our Great Room high end system and our crazy “Transporter” theater system so you can hear the most intense goosebumps system you’ve ever heard.

On down the road, here is the upgrade path that I would take.

  1. Add a REL T7i sub-bass speaker for $1000 to turn this two channel system into wider dynamic range on the low end to blow your mind in 2 channel (using High level connections) and it’ll also provide a 3 channel theater that sounds really good. (with of course the ability to setup lfe connections for theater)
  2. Making sure your cables are at least in the neighborhood of Transparent “Hardwired” speaker and interconnect cables.
  3. When we’re ready to step into 5.1 or 7.1, we can expand the modest PSB speaker choices into either Imagine S Surround and/or Imagine XA to complete your home theater system.
  4. Or, if you’re wanting to step up your speaker tonality and price point, we can demonstrate some higher level speakers.
  5. And if you do want to stay on the PSB speakers path, then the next step I would suggest a 2nd REL T7i to help submerge you in that theater mode even more. Actually, I would recommend the 2nd Sub-base/subwoofer once you added your Surround Sound speakers.
  6. Depending on how pleased you are with the Acoustics of your listening room, you can also stop in to ask Ed for some ideas on treating your room.
  7. Last addition, well, not really, just Enjoy the Path, that’s what makes this hobby fun!

Art Hansen

Audible Images AV is excited to be serving: Melbourne, Florida, Rockledge, Merritt Island, Cocoa Beach, Cape Canaveral, Port St. John, Satellite Beach, Space Coast, Vero Beach, Orlando, Daytona, Kissimmee, Central Florida, the entire state of Florida…and even the greater USA, for all their Stereo two channel and Home Theater systems.

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The Pacemaker

Why is our Blog called the Pacemaker?

I was riding back from a client’s home with Ed one day, when he checked messages on his phone, and one was from a very anxious customer/client.  This message was from what we would call an Ultra High End client.  They were having an issue with a media server, meaning that they could not stream music from their online music source such as Tidal, Spotify, etc. , so essentially, their system was down.  (a minor ongoing issue at some time or other for the entire Industry actually), It had been 3 or 4 hours since the client left a message for our Service Dept, so they were calling back because they had heard nothing back from us yet.

Ed hit the roof with this.  His almost exact words, “This is Unacceptable that ____ ____ should have to wait 4 hours for a phone call back on his system being down.”  Ed continued on to say, “Ultra High End clients must be treated as though it were a Pacemaker implant surgery that we were monitoring for them.”

He was very upset, and yes the issue was addressed promptly, after seeing that message.  It just so happened that everyone at Audible, was just unavailable for phone calls for a two hour window.

I made a mental note of this, as I said to myself, ‘I wish all businesses had this same guideline & compass for focusing on serving their customers’.

So, I  decided that an appropriate name for the Blog would be “The Pacemaker”.   

Personal Side Note:  Ed is a really easy going, enjoys to laugh regularly kind of guy.  Sure he can certainly be very intense with how he feels client customer service should be handled, especially on Ultra High End clients (because at the level of spending they have with us and trust that they must develop in Ed and Audible Images, they pretty much deserve 4-5 star service if you will). But most of the time, he is laughing, cutting up and enjoys talking with folks about things Audiophile.

About our Audiophile Blog

I have broken up the blogging into groups of three categories:  Ultra High End,  High End,  General Audiophiles.  

The drop down menu above takes you to which ever blog/category page you desire to visit. (note: those 3 pages are coming soon)

We hope you enjoy what we share.

Thank You.

Art Hansen

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How might the MartinLogan 60 XT’s compared with Sonus Faber Sonetto 3’s satisfy your Audiophile lust for Modest High End Tower Speakers?

Another play day in the Garden of Audible.

So today I have the honor (emphasis) of playing and comparing the stunning Cherry gloss finish MartinLogan Motion 60 XT tower speakers ($2999 see the product page here) and the lute shaped Italian Walnut finished beauty, namely the Sonetto 3 ($3999,  see product page here), from the still fairly new Sonetto series.  (Note: many colors available, shown in the larger photo gallery below)

The results were awesome.  (in case you’re a skimmer)

Sharing the fun about hearing great new Speakers on the floor, or Amps, or any other aspect of a Day in the Life at Audible Images AV is every Audiophiles dream.  At least it is for me.  I’m also the Marketing guy for us. And since our culture around here is Have Fun, Enjoy learning and Share the fun with others, and the Customers will just enjoy asking Ed for the order, instead of us asking because they can feel his total Passion and Knowledge about designing and tuning systems.   

Now, there’s no getting around the Audiophile crossfit aspect of setting up big, or delicate or just plain heavy stuff, but then we all know that’s just part of the hobby, so anyhow here we go. 😉

My electronics and source were the Dan D’Agostino Momentum Integrated 2 channel Amplifier, and the dCS Rossini DAC and player as a source (streaming).  I chose to use Streaming from the Rossini using Roon (music management system) with a high Rez Tidal account.  Now I know, you’re probably thinking the $45K D’Agostino Integrated is overkill for a $3 to 4K pair of speakers, but there are two reasons why I made the choice.  Because it was close and already setup 🙂  Additionally, when we got a demo from our Sonus Faber & McIntosh rep, back when the Sonetto series came out in late 2018 (see the post here), we had the chance to hear the Sonetto 2 and 5’s, using the Parasound P7 preamp (around $2295 new) with the Parasound A31 (around $3295 new), 3 channel x 250 watt solid state amplifier that we were selling as pre-owned gear for a customer.  And they sounded quite good with those, so perhaps using a much higher end Amp would expose any of the shortcomings or the excellent attributes of the Sonetto 3’s or the 60XT’s.  So here we go.

Please note in the 2 images below: The 60XT’s are actually 8 inches taller than the Sonetto 3 (as in the post header graphic).  The photos below are scaled automatically in the photo gallery settings 🙂  Also, see additional gallery at bottom of page.

Listening to these two beauties was a mixture of Love of listening, Lust and Learning; as I discovered both speakers sound quite spectacular, but had I not gotten the knowledge of placement and specifics of tuning from Ed for these specific speakers, I might have missed the magic that I soon came to hear from both pair.  (More on the tuning details below, as this was a mistake even veterans can make on setting up and tuning these particular speakers 🙂 )

Now so we’re clear  as to my purpose here, this is an experiential blog post, not a review persay. Part of my job, is listening to modest all the way up to ultra crazy high end and sharing what I heard or felt.  If you would like to read detailed reviews to take it further, here is an excellent review on the Sonetto 3’s by hometheaterreview.com here.

If you are on the hunt for some floorstanders in the 2K to 4K bracket to complete your system,  these MartinLogan Motion 60 XT’s and Sonetto 3’s will provide a very enjoyable listening demo for you.  Ed Masterson, Owner, Engineer, Audiophile at Audible Images, makes clear that he doesn’t like the sales guy thing.  Can’t stand the whole pressure or tactic thing.  So that’s one of the reasons I’m blogging and doing Social Media, so you’ll know what a relaxed atmosphere we have in the showroom, and how we’re pretty passionate about setting up speakers just right for you to really hear what you’re thinking about adding to your system.  

So how do these floorstanders sound?  How do they compare? What kind of music are they best suited for?  What are the differences, nuances?

Well, I started my demo comparison the same way I always do as taught by my friend and boss Ed.  Use a specific collection of tracks that I would use to test any and all gear, so that the nuances of the speakers or gear and their differences would become obvious fairly quickly.   So I did this with 6 specific tracks and then afterwards I bounced around in choices to see how well I just melted into the listening chair and slipped out of the test pilot chair.

The 6 Tracks used initially:

  • Fade to Black – “On Every Street” album by Dire Straits
  • Birds of St. Mark – “Solo Acoustic, Vol. 1” album by Jackson Brown
  • Come Away with Me – by Norah Jones
  • Lush Life – by Kate Reid
  • Nature Boy – by the Nordahl Trio/Lisa Ekdahl
  • Hotel California – “Hell Freezes Over” (acoustic version) – Eagles

The Motion 60XT’s  deliver a much warmer sound then the Sonetto 3’s in my experience, probably because of the two 8 inch sub-woofers in the Motion’s vs the two 5.9 inch woofers in the Sonus Faber Sonetto 3.  (a nice review, on the Motion 60XT’s also at hometheaterreview.com here)  There is no muddiness in either pair, nor any brightness that I could feel.  The tonal balance was quite different between the two, (most noticeably because of the extra bass delivery in the Motion’s). But very enjoyable for both.  The treble was pleasant for both, nothing grainy or bright.  The extension in treble seems to be a little greater in the Sonetto’s, more detail, not colored, more articulate.  Smooth and fairly gentle on both in treble. 

I really enjoyed the strong deeper octave chord strikes in the piano from Jackson Brown’s “The Birds of St. Marks” on the 60XT’s.  The energy really made me feel like I was there, you could feel the chords in your chest kind of, as he pounded them in this live recording.  The decay sounded natural (meaning without artifacts),  keeping in mind, the source is all digital from the dCS.  Now I will confess, that for those of you who want an extreme level of articulation in mid-range of percussion, the Sonetto 3 did share a bit more airiness about them, and an even greater level of timbre integrity if you will. 

On the Sonetto’s, that raspy textured voice of Norah Jones had a very detailed and natural resonance.  You had no problem seeing and hearing Norah just a foot or two right of center in the middle of the stage.  Very clearly defined.

On both pair, the acoustic bass in the song “Nature Boy” , Lisa Ekdahl, you could hear and feel the texture of the strings, from the plucking, scraping and vibrating decay.  I love to play this song just to hear how resonant the fingers on that acoustic bass are going to sound, both during the strike and as the fingers travel down the instrument.

I closed the “Test Songs” with ‘Hotel California” , the acoustic guitar version from “Hell Freezes Over”, and of course, this was done on purpose.  That classic intro of the song with multiple artists in the band playing acoustic guitars each doing their own special section of the song, sitting on their chairs in a harmony of transition with the next guy if u will, and the unique drum intro that follows is fairly breathtaking sonically on a high end system.  Plus, personally that 1977 concert in Orlando (or Tampa) right after Joe Walsh joined the Eagles (yeah, I’m an older guy), even though it was the electric guitar version back then, it just makes a special song to close out any demo. And one that I can listen to every day on these incredible sounds systems at work. When you get to hear such perfection sonically almost every day at work, no song gets old. 🙂

So from those 6 tracks,  I will say, both speakers are keepers in their price point.  Now is there a significant difference between the two?  Yes, as shared above.  Do they satisfy your favorite style of music?  This is where having your own personal listening demo would provide the answer.  And, visually, both speakers will probably create smiles for the other half, as their designs are quite gorgeous if you will.

Two key points: The MartinLogan XT’s could not be pointed at you and you had to sit much further back.  And the Sonetto 3’s, were pointed right at you, you sat much closer, and the rake angle was critical for not only the treble, but also for the bass.  How could anyone know this, unless they were an audiophile with tuning experience, or had someone explain this to them when demo-ing the speakers for consideration?  Absolute Sound does an excellent detailed review on the 60XT’s, and the summary on this page 3 link, nails it.

Now here’s where I surrendered the test pilot hat, and sank into personal mode.  I decided to listen to some Europe jazz (for those of you New Orleans or Chicago jazz/blues purists, I strongly suggest adjusting & expanding your palette, because the talent and style of the artists in “Jazz at the Pawnshop”, 1977 original recording, opens a whole new genre of Jazz.)  I first heard some of it a couple years ago, but have spent more time listening to it now at work.

When I was first exposed to Jazz in my early listening days, it was around my senior year in high school, and back then, an African American buddy Stu,  that I worked with after school turned me on to George Benson, Billy Cobham, and yes John Coltrane, and a few other artists that I can’t recall this moment, I realize,  that now, having Tidal to continually expand my listening tastes is such a gift for seasoned and new Audiophiles today.   I will also say, that having row 6 tickets for the Chuck Mangione concert back in 1979 in a theater with only 2-3000 seats that had excellent acoustics, I can literally re-live better sound than that concert in The Transporter at work.

So, I ask, when does a vibrophonist get your attention during a listening session? When Lars Erstand in the album “Jazz at the Pawnshop” does an intimate duet with the bass player in the track ‘Fascinating Rhythm (Live), be Good!: Oh, lady, be good’.  Three or so minutes of dedicated vibrophone enjoyment with the contrast of subtle electric bass.  The colors from those two little mallets brought out so many colors (listening on the 60XT’s now), I became entranced by just hearing Lars duets with other instruments in the recording in addition to just the background complement of the Vibrophone.  What a great recording to just enjoy an instrument that you very rarely listen to.  Like 4rth of July Fireworks colors, but in audio colors enjoyment! (I’m still a new guy to Audiophilia)

Feel free to drop in during showroom walk-in hours, or call ahead to hear these 2 wonderful speakers, and maybe even hear some Electrostatics if you’ve never had the chance, to hear 3 totally unique speaker designs in your budget area.  You will totally enjoy pecking Ed’s brain and submerging in our listening rooms.

Thank you for stopping by!

Audible Images AV

Audible Images AV is excited to be serving: Melbourne, Florida, Rockledge, Merritt Island, Cocoa Beach, Cape Canaveral, Port St. John, Satellite Beach, Space Coast, Vero Beach, Orlando, Daytona, Kissimmee, Central Florida, the entire state of Florida…and even the greater USA

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How to learn Audiophile Talk, describing what you can hear.

Sounds Like? An Audio Glossary

Sterophile.com article:

J. Gordon Holt  |  Jul 29, 1993
Read more at https://www.stereophile.com/reference/50/index.html#zVya6dLmrBXsOSjm.99

 As J. Gordon Holt, the author of Audio Glossary, explains in the article here:

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Wilson Audio’s – Speaker Placement Training: Quick Takes with Ed Masterson

How important is Tuning a system? Is Speaker placement a part of that? How important is training your ears?

Quick Takes with Ed Masterson: Ed continues on his admiration for Wilson Audio gained from his training from them in Utah when he became a Wilson Audio authorized dealer. He talks about Dave Wilson’s obsession and how Dave’s life’s work has created a culture at Wilson of excellence. Attention to detail seems to be a cornerstone of this great company and in fact, all companies.

Quick Takes with Ed Masterson: Wilson Audio’s - Speaker Placement Training

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