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hershon
02-25-2005, 03:36 PM
From what I can gather, almost all DVD's are available for current movies on 5.1 surround sound. They are not recorded for 6.1. or 7.1 sound. What then is the pount of a 6.1 or 7.1 receiver other than to justify increasing prices on receivers? I think I just saw a 9.1 system listed somewhere. Can someone please explain to me.

chimera128
02-25-2005, 04:21 PM
Listen to a 6.1 soundtrack on a 6.1 system and decide whether or not it is worth it for you. I personally think that it is worth it but you may not. In terms of raising prices on receivers, generally when a new generation receiver comes out they offer more power, new features (i.e. 6 channels or 7 channels over the previous 5), supposedly better sound quality, etc, for generally not that much more money than the one they replaced. Of course buying the speakers to take advantage of the channels will cost you. Also I would think most receivers nowadays can create information for the rear center channel from a standard 5.1 soundtrack. So even if the DVD is 5.1 you will still be able to get 6.1 sound (though it won't be discrete).

hershon
02-25-2005, 04:33 PM
I wasn't aware there were any 6.1 or 7.1 DVD's being commercially sold. If so, OK I can see the need for one of these systems. I'm aware that these systems offer improvements over previous receivers that were 5.1 but I just wish they would come out with improved 5.1
receivers. Even if I wanted a 6.1 or 7.1 setup, there literally would be no place to put these extra speakers unless I wanted them on my wall which I don't.



Listen to a 6.1 soundtrack on a 6.1 system and decide whether or not it is worth it for you. I personally think that it is worth it but you may not. In terms of raising prices on receivers, generally when a new generation receiver comes out they offer more power, new features (i.e. 6 channels or 7 channels over the previous 5), supposedly better sound quality, etc, for generally not that much more money than the one they replaced. Of course buying the speakers to take advantage of the channels will cost you. Also I would think most receivers nowadays can create information for the rear center channel from a standard 5.1 soundtrack. So even if the DVD is 5.1 you will still be able to get 6.1 sound (though it won't be discrete).

Quagmire
02-25-2005, 04:38 PM
You have to remember that ALL of these surround formats were first introduced in Theaters for commercial use; even going back to the days of Dolby Surround and Dolby Pro Logic. Then they were made available for home use -- that's why they call it HOME THEATER. Nothing has changed in that regard. In the right room, with the proper setup, and with the right material, a 6.1 or 7.1 setup will sound better than a 5.1 system. Certainly, there is marketing involved, but the technology itself is aimed at drawing more people into the local multiplex; then it spills over into the consumer electronics market.

Q

nightflier
02-25-2005, 05:39 PM
Sorry if this has been asked before, but apart from The Lord Of The Rings series (which I own already), what other movies are available in 6.1? I've been looking, but haven't found any.

LOTR sounds excellent in discrete 7.1, I'm just looking for more...

Defshep
02-25-2005, 05:51 PM
Star Wars Box Set - Dolby ex
Terminator 2 (extreme DVD) - Dolby ex
We Were Soldiers - Dolby ex

Not sure what 5.1 ex means. I've only got 5.1, so...

chimera128
02-26-2005, 12:06 PM
They improve their 5.1 systems as well Hershon. People couldn't stay in business long if they just kept selling the same product. They probably give their 5.1 receivers more power, better dsp modes (though how they define better doesn't necessarily mean better), outputs/inputs etc.

Sir Terrence the Terrible
02-26-2005, 12:41 PM
Sorry if this has been asked before, but apart from The Lord Of The Rings series (which I own already), what other movies are available in 6.1? I've been looking, but haven't found any.

LOTR sounds excellent in discrete 7.1, I'm just looking for more...

No such thing as 7.1 discrete for the home. 6.1 discrete is all that comes close.

Geoffcin
02-26-2005, 01:04 PM
From what I can gather, almost all DVD's are available for current movies on 5.1 surround sound. They are not recorded for 6.1. or 7.1 sound. What then is the pount of a 6.1 or 7.1 receiver other than to justify increasing prices on receivers? I think I just saw a 9.1 system listed somewhere. Can someone please explain to me.

I use a 7.1 HT system. Contrary to what you've been told, Dolby EX provides a very encompassing rear soundfield. DTS-ES is even better, although the amount of DVD's encoded with DTS-ES is pretty slim. The HT effect of 7.1 is SUPERIOR to a 5.1 system by a good margin on SOME material.

The bad news is that if you don't have room, at least 3ft, behind your seating area then a 7.1 system is not reccomended.

htfan14
02-26-2005, 01:25 PM
I've got a 7.2 setup and love it, the extra speakers on the side walls really give a great surround sound feel. The 2 rear speakers are of course not discrete, there is nothing available in 7 channel, so a rear centre or 6. system would be just as good.

Geoffcin
02-26-2005, 01:37 PM
I've got a 7.2 setup and love it, the extra speakers on the side walls really give a great surround sound feel. The 2 rear speakers are of course not discrete, there is nothing available in 7 channel, so a rear centre or 6. system would be just as good.

Even though the rear channels are not discrete, the EX encoded tracks have a good deal of information encoded, and two channels are needed to make it work correctly. I've tried it 6.1, and 7.1 was better .

Sir Terrence the Terrible
02-26-2005, 03:22 PM
I use a 7.1 HT system. Contrary to what you've been told, Dolby EX provides a very encompassing rear soundfield. DTS-ES is even better, although the amount of DVD's encoded with DTS-ES is pretty slim. The HT effect of 7.1 is SUPERIOR to a 5.1 system by a good margin on SOME material.

The bad news is that if you don't have room, at least 3ft, behind your seating area then a 7.1 system is not reccomended.

I wish I could agree with you Geoff, but I get EX without the decoder and the speakers. Rooms that are 14ft and less in width will probably get very little benefit if the listener sits exactly in between the speakers. If there is more than one person watching, then the benefits of 5.1+1 become pretty obvious. With my system, at least three people can clearly hear EX effects without the decoder and speakers.

EX was never intended for the home in all truth. It was designed to fill in the sonic hole in between the left and right surround speaker array. It was also meant to enhance steering effects and to mitigate the comb filtering when images are panned from front to rear(and visa versa). Our left and right speakers are much closer in the home, and since we only use two speakers in the surrounds, comb filtering is not really a problem.

THX certification program was pretty stagnant at the time EX was introduced into the theaters. In order to bring life back into their liscensing program, EX was introduced into the home. 5.1 is still the standard, and the majority of movies are still released

Geoffcin
02-26-2005, 04:07 PM
I wish I could agree with you Geoff, but I get EX without the decoder and the speakers. Rooms that are 14ft and less in width will probably get very little benefit if the listener sits exactly in between the speakers. If there is more than one person watching, then the benefits of 5.1+1 become pretty obvious. With my system, at least three people can clearly hear EX effects without the decoder and speakers.

EX was never intended for the home in all truth. It was designed to fill in the sonic hole in between the left and right surround speaker array. It was also meant to enhance steering effects and to mitigate the comb filtering when images are panned from front to rear(and visa versa). Our left and right speakers are much closer in the home, and since we only use two speakers in the surrounds, comb filtering is not really a problem.

THX certification program was pretty stagnant at the time EX was introduced into the theaters. In order to bring life back into their liscensing program, EX was introduced into the home. 5.1 is still the standard, and the majority of movies are still released

When I moved to 7.1 I noticed a marked increase in spatial effects. I get a kick out if when we play a movie like Harry Potter II and the Basolith slithers behind the walls to a point behind the seating area. Several of my kids friends have jumped out of their seats when this happend! They just got Lion King II, and there's several times that lions are roaring behind your head. For my part, music DVDs really sound "fuller" with the two rear speakers engaged, especially the DTS-ES encoded ones like Peter Gabriel's "Growing Up". For me the increased sense of space is what 7.1 is all about. The fact that the 2 rear channels are not discreet does not affect this IMHO.

kexodusc
02-26-2005, 04:18 PM
I have a rather large room, but I have to agree with Geoffcin on this one...I was very skeptical at first, but an home demo helped me make up my mind. I use the processing most of the time for TV or movies to take advantage of 7 speakers. There are som odd ball exceptions where I can't hear a difference, or don't like the difference I hear.
I think Sir Terrence summed it up though, the benefits decreas in smaller rooms.

I'd recommend getting a handle on 5.1 before adding more speakers, though.

Quagmire
02-26-2005, 10:41 PM
On a related topic, which is preferred for the back surrounds, dipole, bipole, or direct radiating?

Q

Geoffcin
02-27-2005, 03:45 AM
On a related topic, which is preferred for the back surrounds, dipole, bipole, or direct radiating?

Q

They are direct radiating, but have a wide dispersion pattern. I use speakers set to bipole
for the side surrounds. They have both direct, and indirect facing drivers.

shokhead
02-27-2005, 05:25 AM
8.1 9.1 10.1 but i bet whats next will be .2. Its not stopping no matter if the tracks are there or not,they will fake it up somehow to sell and boy,we'll byt it. Well i wont,i got smarter a few years ago when i noticed how broke i was and couldnt keep up with the new formats. Then i got pissed and stopped. I'll stay with 5.1 and would rather get better speakers then more,but thats me.

kexodusc
02-27-2005, 06:15 AM
I use bookshelf monitors on tall, sturdy stands for my rears. Six identical speakers and a center channel that lies horizontally on my TV. I've heard some people reporting excellent results with dipoles as rears. Sir T is really on the ball with dispersion and the way ears pick up sounds tough, he'd probably be the best to consult.

Shokhead: I think you're right, many people would benefit more from a higher quality 5.1 system than a lower quality 7.1 system.
I don't think 6.1 or 7.1 has taken off as well as the industry hoped, so you might see it stop at 7.1 for most models (except the high-end receivers) at least for awhile.

cjtalbot
02-27-2005, 11:52 AM
One more 6.1 discreet soundtrack -

I just rented the movie "Saw"

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387564/

And this had a 6.1 DTS Discreet option...

And it was fantastic. Made me actually glad that I had taken the trouble to put in the 6th speaker in my 6.1 system.....first time in a while.

Hopefully we'll see more normal dvd's like this one coming out...

nightflier
02-28-2005, 02:44 PM
Blade II (DTS ES)
Monsters Inc. (DD)
Signs (DTS ES)

I don't know if Any of the Superbit titles (Panic Room, 5th Element, SW Episode II, etc.) have 6.1 sound, either....

Aldo WIngate
03-01-2005, 06:31 AM
If you don't like it, DONT BUY IT, BOY!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Who's your DADDY, FOOL????????????????

Defshep
03-01-2005, 09:02 AM
The remastered Top Gun is 6.1 DTS-ES as well.

Sir Terrence the Terrible
03-01-2005, 10:13 AM
If you don't like it, DONT BUY IT, BOY!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Who's your DADDY, FOOL????????????????

Hey Aldo, can you participate in the discussion and please refrain from asking everyone who is their daddy. I think everyone here knows who their father is.

Thanks

Mansquito
03-02-2005, 10:54 PM
There is this thing called Neo:6 which can expand standard stereo and 5.1 audio to utilize the 6th speaker. The one reason I would add more speakers is to reduce the sweet spot. Ideally, there would be no sweet spot, I wouldn't have to worry about comfort vs best listening position.

shokhead
03-03-2005, 06:35 AM
Dont think that would effect that at all.

Swish
03-03-2005, 07:28 AM
I've got a 7.2 setup and love it, the extra speakers on the side walls really give a great surround sound feel. The 2 rear speakers are of course not discrete, there is nothing available in 7 channel, so a rear centre or 6. system would be just as good.

and the effect is awesome, and I agree with your your initial comments. Not sure I do regard the rears since my Rotel does a nice job matrixing the sound to 7.1, even if it's not discrete. I can easily move from 7.1 to 5.1 and back for comparison since I have a separate 2 channel amp driving the sides while my 5 channel Adcom drives the others. I can tell you that my friends, many of whom have their own HTs, agree that the sides make a big difference in the overall sound for some of the source discs I use, especially music or movies in DTS.

Swish

Quagmire
03-03-2005, 08:52 AM
Dont think that would effect that at all.
Sure it would; in the same way that adding a center channel speaker for the front soundstage achored dialogue to the center channel location. Prior to the addition of that center channel speaker, those sitting out of the sweet spot would have this information colapse to either the front left or right speaker -- depending on which speaker was closer to them. The only person or people who got good phantom center imaging were the ones sitting in the sweet spot.

The rear center speaker(s) is meant to accomplish the same thing in the rear soundstage.

Q

Sir Terrence the Terrible
03-03-2005, 09:46 AM
Jeeze,
Everyone is making these claims of 5.1+1 superiority over 5.1, but nobody is adding the size and geometry of the room into the equation. I installed a 5.1+1 when they first came out. As a matter of fact, I moved the EX system around to several rooms in my old house. The width of the room greatly influenced the effectiveness of EX. In one of the more narrow rooms(14ft wide) it was pretty much a waste because my L/R surrounds were VERY effective in producing phantom images across the rear. It was like doubling an already successful effect.

However, the wider the room got(my largest room was my screening/mixing room at 22ft wide) it was stunningly effective at filling in the rear soundfield effectively. EX effect is directly determined by room geometry. If you watch movies alone, and your room is not particularly wide(or you are NOT using dipoles on the sides) then EX decoding and the extra speakers are just no necessary.

Mansquito
03-03-2005, 10:06 AM
It's more about matching the speakers to the room, for most people, than it is about matching the room to the speakers. In an ideal world, we'd all have our own personal home theater rooms, acoustically optimized and component in its 'perfect' position. Basically, speakers work by moving air. You need to consider not only the distances for speaker placement within whatever room you are setting your system up in, but also the characteristics of the speakers...as a rule of thumb, the bigger the speaker, the bigger the room required to get the best effect.

Quagmire
03-03-2005, 12:29 PM
Jeeze,
Everyone is making these claims of 5.1+1 superiority over 5.1, but nobody is adding the size and geometry of the room into the equation. I installed a 5.1+1 when they first came out. As a matter of fact, I moved the EX system around to several rooms in my old house. The width of the room greatly influenced the effectiveness of EX. In one of the more narrow rooms(14ft wide) it was pretty much a waste because my L/R surrounds were VERY effective in producing phantom images across the rear. It was like doubling an already successful effect.

However, the wider the room got(my largest room was my screening/mixing room at 22ft wide) it was stunningly effective at filling in the rear soundfield effectively. EX effect is directly determined by room geometry. If you watch movies alone, and your room is not particularly wide(or you are NOT using dipoles on the sides) then EX decoding and the extra speakers are just no necessary.
Just for the record; from my original reply to this thread...

"In the right room, with the proper setup, and with the right material, a 6.1 or 7.1 setup will sound better than a 5.1 system."

As I pointed out, the superiority of these systems is contingent upon a number of things, not the least of which is the room -- which incidentally, was the first item I mentioned.

And from my previous post...

"The rear center speaker(s) is meant to accomplish the same thing [as the front center speaker] in the rear soundstage."

The qualifying word here was "meant", which means that even though this is the intention it doesn't always work effectively -- sometimes it is successful, and sometimes it is not. I do realize that unlike the front center channel, which almost always has discrete information intended for the center channel speaker, there is only a limited number of titles where this is true for the rear center channel; although there may be information panned or steered through the surround speakers to create a phantom rear center sound.

Q

shokhead
03-03-2005, 12:35 PM
Most dont have the right room and its hard enough to fit 5 plus a sub. Fit a wife in all of this and your riding the edge. LOL

kexodusc
03-03-2005, 06:06 PM
Jeeze,
. In one of the more narrow rooms(14ft wide) it was pretty much a waste because my L/R surrounds were VERY effective in producing phantom images across the rear. It was like doubling an already successful effect.

Sir T:
I see what you're saying here and partially agree, but it would seem to me that especially in a narrow room (and I don't consider 14 ft THAT narrow) rear stereo imaging would really suck once you move out of the sweet spot, so the phantom image wouldn't be as good. The people on the outside cushions of the couch wouldn't enjoy as good a rear phantom image, right? Of course, for the whole 3 minutes of a movie that a 6th channel might be adequately used it's much easier to argue the value of 6.1 and 7.1 than the performance.

Just curious, does that system have 2 front main speakers that produce a good center image as well? If so, why a center channel?

godfatherofsoul
03-03-2005, 08:44 PM
"The rear center speaker(s) is meant to accomplish the same thing [as the front center speaker] in the rear soundstage."



Q[/QUOTE]

Actually, the rear center channel does not produce dialog the way a front center channel does. If it did, this would throw everything off and what would be the point of a front center channel?
in 6.1, the rear center is mono (as I have been taught) and is there to shorten the distance between the rears. I could be way off but I know the rear center does not produce the same info as the front center.
Cheers

Quagmire
03-03-2005, 10:27 PM
"The rear center speaker(s) is meant to accomplish the same thing [as the front center speaker] in the rear soundstage."



Q

Actually, the rear center channel does not produce dialog the way a front center channel does. If it did, this would throw everything off and what would be the point of a front center channel?
in 6.1, the rear center is mono (as I have been taught) and is there to shorten the distance between the rears. I could be way off but I know the rear center does not produce the same info as the front center.
Cheers[/QUOTE]


NO, NO, NO!!!!
My point wasn't that the rear center is devoted to dialog. My point was that just as the front center speaker produces an ACTUAL CENTER IMAGE so that the audience is not dependent on sitting in the "sweet spot" in order to obtain a stable PHANTOM CENTER IMAGE (produced by the front left and right speakers and highly dependent on the seating position) so the rear center speaker fills between the rear surrounds to create an ACTUAL REAR CENTER IMAGE as opposed to a PHANTOM REAR CENTER IMAGE (also highly dependent on the seating position). For those sitting outside of the "sweet spot", when there is not a front center speaker in the system, the information intended to come from the center between the front speakers will (from those listener's perceptions) collapse to whichever front speaker they are seated nearest -- be that information dialog or whatever else. The same is true of the imaging between the rear surround speakers. The dedicated rear center speaker eliminates the need to create a phantom rear center image because a speaker is there creating an actual rear center image instead.

You've gotten tangled up in the dialog thing and have missed my point entirely. Also, for what it's worth, the front center speaker reproduces much more that dialog and you may be surprised to find that at times the rear center speaker may be called upon to reproduce dialog. Hope this clears things up.

Q

godfatherofsoul
03-03-2005, 11:34 PM
Actually, the rear center channel does not produce dialog the way a front center channel does. If it did, this would throw everything off and what would be the point of a front center channel?
in 6.1, the rear center is mono (as I have been taught) and is there to shorten the distance between the rears. I could be way off but I know the rear center does not produce the same info as the front center.
Cheers


NO, NO, NO!!!!
My point wasn't that the rear center is devoted to dialog. My point was that just as the front center speaker produces an ACTUAL CENTER IMAGE so that the audience is not dependent on sitting in the "sweet spot" in order to obtain a stable PHANTOM CENTER IMAGE (produced by the front left and right speakers and highly dependent on the seating position) so the rear center speaker fills between the rear surrounds to create an ACTUAL REAR CENTER IMAGE as opposed to a PHANTOM REAR CENTER IMAGE (also highly dependent on the seating position). For those sitting outside of the "sweet spot", when there is not a front center speaker in the system, the information intended to come from the center between the front speakers will (from those listener's perceptions) collapse to whichever front speaker they are seated nearest -- be that information dialog or whatever else. The same is true of the imaging between the rear surround speakers. The dedicated rear center speaker eliminates the need to create a phantom rear center image because a speaker is there creating an actual rear center image instead.

You've gotten tangled up in the dialog thing and have missed my point entirely. Also, for what it's worth, the front center speaker reproduces much more that dialog and you may be surprised to find that at times the rear center speaker may be called upon to reproduce dialog. Hope this clears things up.

Q[/QUOTE]

I'm not trying to argue the point, but the front center produces 70% of information when watching a movie in 5.1. this being said, I gathered that you were trying to say the rear center produced the same thing. I guess I misunderstood what you were trying to say and we agree on the major point that 6.1 and 7.1 are only useful when the room is large enough to accomodate such things.
I have selective memory - I don't select what is remembered, but I remember what is selected...
Cheers.

shokhead
03-04-2005, 05:12 AM
For me,could care less how it sounds anywhere else but right where i'm sitting as its set up for me and not for othere' :o s. Hell yes,i'm right in the sweet spot,just the way i have it set up.

Quagmire
03-04-2005, 07:59 AM
"I guess I misunderstood what you were trying to say and we agree on the major point that 6.1 and 7.1 are only useful when the room is large enough to accomodate such things."

Per my earlier replies, yes the room is a factor in the development of the so called "sweet spot" and the creation of a stable phantom rear center image for those sitting in that zone. 6.1 and 7.1 systems eliminate the need for a phantom rear center image and thus, effectively eliminate or drastically reduce the need for a sweet spot. I don't necessarily agree that the room has to be large for a 6.1 or 7.1 system to be effective, but the room will play a substantial role in how effective or ineffective such a system will be.

"I have selective memory - I don't select what is remembered, but I remember what is selected..."

Then reading comprehension should be a real priority for you.

Q

Sir Terrence the Terrible
03-04-2005, 09:16 AM
It's more about matching the speakers to the room, for most people, than it is about matching the room to the speakers. In an ideal world, we'd all have our own personal home theater rooms, acoustically optimized and component in its 'perfect' position. Basically, speakers work by moving air. You need to consider not only the distances for speaker placement within whatever room you are setting your system up in, but also the characteristics of the speakers...as a rule of thumb, the bigger the speaker, the bigger the room required to get the best effect.

You really cannot match speakers to the room, because you don't really know how a speaker will interact with the room until you get it there. Some speakers couple with the room profoundly, and others minimally interact with the room boundaries. There are so many unknowns that everything becomes impossible to calculate.

The reality is we match the room with the speakers. That is why we acoustically and electronically treat the room after the speakers are installed.

Sir Terrence the Terrible
03-04-2005, 09:44 AM
Sir T:
I see what you're saying here and partially agree, but it would seem to me that especially in a narrow room (and I don't consider 14 ft THAT narrow) rear stereo imaging would really suck once you move out of the sweet spot, so the phantom image wouldn't be as good. The people on the outside cushions of the couch wouldn't enjoy as good a rear phantom image, right? Of course, for the whole 3 minutes of a movie that a 6th channel might be adequately used it's much easier to argue the value of 6.1 and 7.1 than the performance.

Just curious, does that system have 2 front main speakers that produce a good center image as well? If so, why a center channel?

Kex,
It really depends on the dispersion pattern of the rear speakers. I use two bipoles in the rear, and I have no problem whatsoever in hearing a phantom image anyplace on my couch. That is largely because the of the combination of height and design of the speaker itself. If you sit on the extreme left of the couch, the right surround is heard louder than the left. And visa versa if you sit on the extreme right. That is the very effect the speaker designer was looking for, and acheived. This makes the sweet spot alot larger in the surrounds than most conventional speaker systems.

I am just estimating, and it really depends on the room and speakers used. 14ft appears to me to be the point where some surround speakers begin to breakdown in surroundfield continuety. This is the point where EX might be a big help. If you usually watch movies with more than one person, then EX is probably a pretty good bet for you. There are however more caveates to the advantages of 5.1+1 than just wanted it because it is the latest and last enhancement(which is why 95% of folks jumped on the bandwagon)

kexodusc
03-04-2005, 12:01 PM
I am just estimating, and it really depends on the room and speakers used. 14ft appears to me to be the point where some surround speakers begin to breakdown in surroundfield continuety. This is the point where EX might be a big help. If you usually watch movies with more than one person, then EX is probably a pretty good bet for you. There are however more caveates to the advantages of 5.1+1 than just wanted it because it is the latest and last enhancement(which is why 95% of folks jumped on the bandwagon)

I think you really nailed it with that last sentence...I was dead set against the idea of adding more speakers until a few months after I actually had a receiver with the extra speaker capabilities...then I was the "let's see how it sounds" mode. But I've seen many people that buy speakers with the idea of filling up the "holes" on the back of the receiver. Hey, if my amp's got it, I need it.
Then of course there's the THX certifications, and marketing "push" efforts.
To my knowledge, every 6.1/7.1 capable receiver gives the consumer the option of adding to 5.1. To me this really makes the whole debate moot, let those who are inclined enjoy whichever version of the presentation they prefer.